Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-634-81
Manuel Jesus Torres Quinones (Applicant) v.
Minister of Employment and Immigration (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Thurlow C.J., Heald J. and Primrose D.J.—Edmonton, October 25; Ottawa, December 9, 1982
Immigration — Minister rejecting claim for Convention- refugee status — Applicant applying to Immigration Appeal Board for redetermination — Applicant's declaration referring to Minister's decision — Department submitting internal memo stating that special consideration deemed unwarranted — Department submitting letter reciting Minister's reasons — Board determining applicant not Convention refugee Whether memo and letter capable of being prejudicial and should not have been before Board — Respondent conceding memo could be considered prejudicial and was submitted to
Board without applicant's consent Not improper for letter to be submitted — Proceeding under s. 71(1) of Immigration Act, 1976 not adversarial, so no right to respond to material submitted — Letter not "evidence prejudicial to the applicant" as per Saraos — Department having altered practice, in response to Federal Court decisions, by supplying reasons to applicant and to Board — "Redetermination" means reviewing Minister's decision and deciding on correctness — Necessary to have Minister's reasons to redetermine — Judicial or quasi-judicial tribunal has implicit right, unless expressly excluded, to consider reasons if empowered by statute to review actions of another — No exclusion in Immigration Act, 1976 — Requirement of enlarged record does not change nature of Board's function so as to render reasons inadmissible — Minister's decision and reasons not "evidence" as per Saraos — Applicant's declaration a response to Minister's reasons — Board's decision set aside, matter referred back for reconsideration — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28 — Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, ss. 2(1), 45, 70, 71.
The applicant claimed to be a Convention refugee, but pursuant to section 45 of the Immigration Act, 1976 ("the Act"), the Minister rejected this claim. The applicant then applied to the Immigration Appeal Board, under section 70, for a redetermination. As required by subsection 70(2), his applica tion to the Board was accompanied by a sworn declaration. In paragraph 4 of the latter, a reference was made to the Minis ter's decision. The Immigration Department itself placed two documents before the Board. The first was an intra-departmen tal memo which stated that the applicant's case had been reviewed and that special consideration had been deemed
unwarranted. The second was a copy of a letter advising the applicant of the Minister's determination and setting forth the Minister's reasons. Pursuant to section 71 of the Act, the Board refused to allow the applicant's claim for Convention-refugee status to proceed, and determined that he was not a Convention refugee. The applicant applied under section 28 of the Federal Court Act to review and set aside the Board's decision, on the ground that the two documents were capable of being prejudi cial to his case and therefore should not have been before the Board.
Held, per Heald J. (Primrose D.J. concurring): The Board's decision should be set aside and the matter referred back for reconsideration and redetermination, on the basis that the letter, but not the memo, may properly be placed before the Board. The respondent has conceded that the memo could be considered prejudicial, and that it was submitted to the Board without the applicant's consent. In light of the judgment in Saraos, it follows that the presentation of the memo to the Board vitiated the subsequent decision. The objections with respect to the letter could not, however, be upheld. A proceed ing before the Board under subsection 7(1) is not of an adversarial nature; therefore, documents submitted at that stage cannot be looked upon as material submitted by an adverse party, and no right to respond to such material is evoked. Secondly, the letter was not "evidence prejudicial to the applicant" in the sense in which that term was employed in Saraos. While subsection 45(5) requires only that the Minister inform the applicant (inter alla) of his determination, the judgment of the Trial Division in Brempong has prompted the Department to alter its practice, so that it now advises an applicant of the reasons for a section 45 determination. In that same matter, the Court of Appeal stated that the Minister's reasons should have been before the Court where the applicant is seeking to review and set aside the Minister's decision; and probably in response to that statement, it has become standard for the Department, when a redetermination has been applied for, to forward to the Board copies of the letter advising the applicant of the Minister's reasons. An examination of the Act indicates that the Court of Appeal's reasoning in Brempong applies equally with respect to the placing of reasons before the Board in a redetermination under sections 70 and 71. The Board's obligation to redetermine is an obligation to review the Minister's determination and decide upon its correctness. In the discharge of this obligation, the Minister's reasons are a neces sary part of the record. When a judicial or quasi-judicial tribunal is empowered by statute to review and judge the actions of any other tribunal, there is an implicit right in the reviewing authority to consider any reasons given for the actions under review. This right exists unless it is expressly excluded by the governing statute, and no such express provi sion is to be found in the Act. The fact that the Act calls for an enlarged record does not alter the nature of the function performed by the Board so as to render inadmissible the reasons of the tribunal being reviewed. The Minister's decision and reasons are not the kind of "evidence" the exclusion of which is addressed in Saraos, and the reference in paragraph 4 of the applicant's declaration may be regarded as a response to the Minister's reasons.
Per Thurlow C.J. dissenting in part: The letter was capable of being prejudicial in that the Minister's opinion as to the vagueness and credibility of the applicant's evidence could have influenced the Board, and in that the applicant might have considered including additional material in his declaration if he had known that the letter was going to be submitted. The procedure on a section 70 application is of a special kind: it does not give the applicant any opportunity to appear before the Board; nor is there statutory authorization for the Depart ment's submitting anything to the Board in support of the Minister's decision, or for the Board's requesting or receiving information beyond what the applicant has supplied. The appli cant would, however, be unable to object if he were to comply with a request from the Board for further information. The Act contemplates that the Board's decision will be made solely on the basis of the material supplied by the applicant. The pro ceeding is not comparable to an application in the Court of Appeal for judicial review, and consequently, that Court's decision in Brempong has no application here. The Saraos case, on the other hand, sets forth certain principles regarding the consideration, by the Board, of evidence not mentioned in subsection 70(2). The earlier case of Diaz is reconcilable with those principles, but is distinguishable from the instant case with respect to the facts. The reference in the applicant's declaration to the decision of the Minister cannot be regarded as a consent either to the Board's considering the reasons of the Minister, or to the Department's submitting the letter to the Board. Accordingly the letter, like the memo, should not have been before the Board.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED APPLIED:
Brempong v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1981j I F.C. 211 (C.A.); Diaz v. Minister of Employ ment and Immigration, [1981 ] 2 F.C. 188 (C.A.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Saraos v. Minister of Employment and Immigration Canada et al., [1982] I F.C. 304 (C.A.).
CONSIDERED:
Brempong v. Refugee Status Advisory Committee, et al., [1980] 2 F.C. 316; 109 D.L.R. (3d) 664 (T.D.).
COUNSEL:
G. B. Gawne for applicant.
B. J. Saunders for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Chapman, Finlay, MacPherson & Gawne, Edmonton, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
THURLOW C.J. (dissenting in part): This is an application to review and set aside a decision of the Immigration Appeal Board refusing, under subsection 71(1)' of the Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, to allow the applicant's application for redetermination of his claim for Convention-refugee status to proceed, and deter mining that he is not a Convention refugee.
The only points relied on in support of the application were that there were before the Board two documents which were not part of the appli cant's application to the Board and which were capable of being prejudicial to the applicant's case. The documents were:
1. a memorandum from the Chief of Operation al Procedures for Applicants in Canada, an official of the Department of Employment and Immigration, to the chief of the Edmonton office of the Department, saying of the applicant,
The Special Review Committee has reviewed this case and has decided that special consideration is not warranted.
and
2. a copy of the Refugee Status Advisory Com mittee's letter advising the applicant of the Min ister's determination, under subsection 45(5), that the applicant was not a "Convention refugee" as defined in subsection 2(1) of the Act. The letter included the following:
The reasons for the Minister's decision are as follows:
Your activities in support of the Unidad Popular appear to have been more social than political. You provide a very vague description of seven detentions, but I note that you
' 71. (1) Where the Board receives an application referred to in subsection 70(2), it shall forthwith consider the application and if, on the basis of such consideration, it is of the opinion that there are reasonable grounds to believe that a claim could, upon the hearing of the application, be established, it shall allow the application to proceed, and in any other case it shall refuse to allow the application to proceed and shall thereupon determine that the person is not a Convention refugee.
were detained for only a few hours on each occasion and were never held in prison.
Your description of problems with members of DINA who were posing as sanitation and tax inspectors lacks credibility in that it does not appear likely that members of that organization would resort to that kind of subterfuge.
It was conceded at the argument that both documents were in fact put before the Board by the Department and not by the applicant. It was conceded, as well, that the first document was prejudicial, and that on that account the Board's decision should be set aside and the matter referred back to the Board for reconsideration and redetermination.
Notwithstanding the submission of counsel for the respondent, in my opinion, the second docu ment is also capable of being prejudicial in at least two ways. The opinion expressed on behalf of the Minister both as to the vagueness of the evidence and its credibility could, as it seems to me, have its influence—subtle or otherwise—on the approach of the Board to its consideration of the evidence submitted by the applicant. Further, had the appli cant known that the document would be put before the Board by the Department he might well have considered including additional material to meet it in his declaration.
Counsel for the Department also submitted that the document was nevertheless properly before the Board.
The question of what material may properly be considered by the Board when dealing with the first stage of an application for redetermination under section 70 2 of the Act was recently con sidered by this Court in Saraos v. Minister of
2 70. ( 1 ) A person who claims to be a Convention refugee and has been informed in writing by the Minister pursuant to subsection 45(5) that he is not a Convention refugee may, within such period of time as is prescribed, make an application to the Board for a redetermination of his claim that he is a Convention refugee.
(2) Where an application is made to the Board pursuant to subsection (1), the application shall be accompanied by a copy of the transcript of the examination under oath referred to in subsection 45(1) and shall contain or be accompanied by a declaration of the applicant under oath setting out
(a) the nature of the basis of the application;
(Continued on next page)
Employment and Immigration Canada et al. 3
In that case, Pratte J., after discussing the purely administrative character of the proceedings lead ing to the Minister's decision, went on to say 4 with respect to the function of the Immigration Appeal Board at that stage:
However, the special character of the decision that must be made at the first step pursuant to subsection 71(1) must be stressed. That decision is made without a hearing at a time when the applicant has not yet an adversary who opposes his claim and when, in the normal course, there is nothing before the Board except the application for redetermination and the other documents filed by the applicant pursuant to subsection 70(2). The function of the Board at that stage is not to assess and weigh contradictory evidence adduced by parties having divergent interests; it is merely to consider the documentary evidence filed by the applicant in support of his claim pursuant to subsection 70(2) and form an opinion on the chances of success of the application.
The procedure for reaching the decision is also unusual. The application is to be in writing. It is of an ex parte nature. There is no provision for an oral hearing. The applicant thus has no opportu nity to appear before the tribunal that is to decide whether his claim will be permitted to proceed. On the other hand, no opportunity is given to the Department to put anything before the tribunal in support of the Minister's decision, either orally or in writing. Moreover, the Board itself is not authorized by the statute to ask for or receive information or representations in addition to what the applicant puts before it with his application, though if the Board were to ask the applicant for further information and he responded by supplying it he would no longer be in a position to object to its reception and consideration.
In the Saraos case, Pratte J. continued: 5
(Continued from previous page)
(b) a statement in reasonable detail of the facts on which the
application is based;
(e) a summary in reasonable detail of the information and evidence intended to be offered at the hearing; and
(d) such other representations as the applicant deems rele
vant to the application.
3 [1982] I F.C. 304 (C.A.).
4 Id., at p. 308.
5 Id., at p. 309.
I now come back to the problem to be resolved: must a decision of the Board dismissing a claim summarily pursuant to subsection 71(1) be set aside if it was not made solely on the basis of the documents mentioned in subsection 70(2)? This question does not admit of a simple answer. Distinctions must be made:
I. The fact that the Board has considered evidence other than the documents mentioned in subsection 70(2) certainly does not affect the validity of the Board's decision if the evidence in question is in no way prejudicial to the applicant. To set aside a decision of the Board on such a ground would be a futile exercise.
2. The validity of the Board's decision is not affected either, in my view, even if the evidence is prejudicial to the appli cant, when the applicant himself has either asked or agreed that the Boad take that evidence into consideration. (Wheth- er or not an applicant has in fact asked or agreed that the Board take the evidence into consideration is a question of fact to be determined by the Court in each case.) In those circumstances, an applicant cannot complain that the Board acted on his request or consent.
3. The Board's decision should be set aside, however, if the evidence is prejudicial to the applicant and was considered by the Board without his consent.
In the present case, I have no doubt that the irregularity committed by the Board does not vitiate its decision. The applicant blames the Board for having taken into consideration the evidence given by his brother-in-law before the senior immigration officer on the occasion of the applicant's examina tion under oath. However, if that witness was examined at that time, it was by the applicant's counsel and at his express request. Moreover, it is the applicant who, with the assistance of counsel, filed with the Board, without any reserve or objec tion, the evidence that he now says should not have been considered. This is clearly a case, in my view, where the applicant has consented or must be deemed to have consented to the introduction into the record of the evidence in question.
In Diaz v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, 6 a case decided some months before the Saraos decision, the Court had declined to set aside the Board's decision where it appeared that the letter advising the applicant of the Minister's decision had been before the Board. The applicant, in one paragraph of his declaration, had quoted a paragraph from the reasons stated in the letter. In another paragraph of his declaration, the applicant had expressed a belief that the Minister had misin terpreted his fear to be fear of military service. The Court appears to have considered that these references by the applicant to the Minister's rea sons fell within the meaning of "such other representations as the applicant deems relevant to
6
[19811 2 F.C. 188 (C.A.).
the application", in paragraph 70(2)(d), and were sufficient to justify the Board in examining the letter itself so as to be informed of all that was in it.
The exposition of the statute in the Saraos case can, as it seems to me, be reconciled with the conclusion reached by the Court in the Duran case on two possible bases. The first is that the Court concluded on the facts that the applicant had asked or agreed that the Court take the Minister's letter into consideration. The second is that the letter was not prejudicial because the whole of what might have been prejudicial in it was dis closed in the applicant's declaration.
The Minister's decision itself was the subject of an application for review in Brempong v. Minister of Employment and Immigration.' The Court held that, as what was under attack was a purely administrative decision not required by law to be made on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis, the Court did not have jurisdiction to entertain the application. In the course of his reasons, Urie J. observed [at pages 213-214]:
As as result of an application filed on behalf of the applicant herein, the Trial Division granted an order that the Minister of Employment and Immigration send or deliver to the applicant or his counsel, in writing, the reasons for his determination that the applicant is not a Convention refugee. With respect, I have grave doubts as to the propriety of requiring the Minister to give such reasons. However, that question is not one upon which we are called to make a decision in this application. The order also provided that until the applicant or his counsel have received the said reasons and have been given a reasonable opportunity to submit to the respondent Immigration Appeal Board responses to the Minister's reasons, the Board is prohib ited from considering the application of the applicant for redetermination of his claim that he is a Convention refugee. We were advised by counsel that an appeal from this order was filed but, for some unspecified reason, it has been withdrawn. In compliance with the order, the Minister apparently provided reasons for his decision but they are not part of the record in this application, although they ought to have been if we are properly to consider this application on its merits since what was said by the Minister forms the basis of the attack on his determination of the issue before him.
It is clear that in this Court a decision that is to be reviewed must be before the Court but, in my opinion, that situation is not comparable to the situation where an application for redetermination is made to the Immigration Appeal Board under
7 [ 1981 ] 1 F.C. 211 (C.A.).
subsection 70(1) of the Immigration Act, 1976. That, as has already been pointed out, is a special kind of procedure which, as I see it, contemplates that the material on which the application is to be determined is to be only that put before the Board by the applicant. The Brempong case accordingly, in my view, does not bear on the question involved in the present case.
I come now to the applicant's declaration in the present case. It consists of the following six paragraphs:
I. That I am the Applicant in the Application for a Redetermi- nation of a claim to be a Convention Refugee, a copy of which application is attached hereto and marked as Exhibit "A" to this my Statutory Declaration.
2. That attached hereto and marked as Exhibit "B" to my Statutory Declaration is a copy of the transcript of my exami nation under oath conducted before T. Van Den Bussche, Senior Immigration Officer, on the 21st day of March, A.D. 1980.
3. That attached hereto and marked as Exhibit "C" to this my Statutory Declaration is the original handwritten copy of the document referred to commencing at the final question on page 12 of the transcript, aforesaid, and thereafter, and that attached hereto and marked as Exhibit "D" to this my Statu tory Declaration is a typewritten copy of the said document.
4. That I make this application on the basis that I feel that the Minister of Employment and Immigration erred in determining that I am not a Convention Refugee, as I fear persecution should I return to Chile, because of my associations with the Unidad Popular and members thereof.
5. That the facts on which I base my application are set forth in my statement under oath contained in Exhibit "B" to this my Statutory Declaration.
6. That at the hearing before the Immigration Appeal Board I intend to offer as evidence greater detail of the occurrence referred to in my statement under oath, including detail as to my physical and sexual abuse by the military and secret police, together with medical evidence in support thereof.
It will be observed that the only reference to the Minister's decision is in paragraph 4. As I read it, that paragraph is no more than a reiteration of the basis of the applicant's claim. No part of the Minister's reasons is quoted nor are the reasons produced as an exhibit. Nor does the paragraph purport to refer to the Minister's reasons for refus ing the claim. I do not think such a paragraph can be regarded as a request or agreement that the reasons be considered by the Board, or even as a permission to the Board to examine the Minister's reasons. Still less is it a licence to the Department
to put the Minister's letter before the Board. Accordingly, even on the basis of the reasoning in the Diaz case, 1 am of the opinion that the Minis ter's letter should not have been before the Board.
I would set aside the Board's decision and refer the matter back to the Board for reconsideration and redetermination of the applicant's claim, on the basis that neither the memorandum nor the letter described in these reasons should form part of the material that may properly be considered by the Board.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a decision of the Immigration Appeal Board wherein the Board refused to allow the applicant's application for a redetermination of his claim for Convention-refugee status to proceed, and determined that the applicant is not a Conven tion refugee.
In the Case upon which the section 28 applica tion was argued, there appear two documents which are important to the final determination of the issues herein. The first document (Case, p. 35) is a memorandum dated March 17, 1981, and was signed by one B. Maitland, described as "Chief Applicants in Canada Division, Operational Proce dures, Foreign Branch of Employment and Immi gration Canada", and was sent to the Manager, Canada Immigration Centre, Edmonton, Alberta. The memorandum reads as follows:
Manuel Jesus Torres-Quinones—d.o.b. 11/2/41—Chile
The Special Review Committee has reviewed this case and has decided that special consideration is not warranted.
The second document (Case, p. 36), also dated March 17, 1981 is a letter addressed to the appli cant from the Registrar, Refugee Status Advisory Committee. That letter reads as follows:
Mr. Manuel Jesus Torres Quinones Dear Mr. Torres:
I refer to your claim to Convention refugee status made pursuant to subsection 45(I) of the Immigration Act, 1976.
This is to inform you, pursuant to subsection 45(5) of the Act, that the Minister of Employment and Immigration has determined that you are not a Convention refugee as defined in subsection 2(1) of the Act.
The reasons for the Minister's decision are as follows:
Your activities in support of the Unidad Popular appear to have been more social than political. You provide a very vague description of seven detentions, but I note that you were detained for only a few hours on each occasion and were never held in prison.
Your description of problems with members of DINA who were posing as sanitation and tax inspectors lacks credibility in that it does not appear likely that members of that organization would resort to that kind of subterfuge.
I would like to draw to your attention that the Minister will not discuss any specifics of your claim. Pursuant to subsection 70(1) of the Act, you may, within fifteen (15) days following receipt of this notice, apply in writing to the Immigration Appeal Board for a redetermination of your claim to refugee status. If you wish to make such an application, you should immediately contact the senior immigration officer at the Canada Immigration Centre where you made your claim to refugee slates. The officer will be pleased to inform you of the procedures to be followed and will give you the required application forms.
At the hearing before us, respondent's counsel conceded that the memorandum dated March 17, 1981, from B. Maitland to the Manager, Canada Immigration Centre, Edmonton, should not have been before the Board because it could be con sidered to be prejudicial to the applicant and was considered by the Board without his consent. Therefore, it fell within the third category dis cussed by Pratte J. in the Saraos case,' and as such vitiated the Board's order. However, counsel for the parties did not agree with respect to the second document referred to supra, namely the letter of March 17, 1981, to the applicant from the Registrar of the Refugee Status Advisory Com mittee. Respondent's counsel took the view, both in his memorandum and in oral argument, that sub ject letter from the Registrar was not prejudicial
8 Saraos v. Minister of Employment and Immigration Canada et al., [ 19821 I F.C. 304 (C.A.), at p. 309.
to the applicant and therefore did not fall within the third category in Saraos (supra).
On the other hand, counsel for the applicant submitted that consideration of subject letter by the Board was not authorized by the Immigration Act, 1976. It was his further submission that, since that letter made adverse findings of credibility with respect to the applicant, the letter was clearly prejudicial. Counsel added that the applicant did not know that the letter was before the Board until several months after the Board's decision was given. Thus, in his view, the applicant was denied the fundamental right to respond to all "material submitted by an adverse party". Initially, I would observe that the letter in question is not, in my view, "material submitted by an adverse party". In the Saraos case (supra), Pratte J., while discuss ing the nature of the subsection 71(1) [Immigra- tion Act, 1976] proceedings, said at page 308:
However, the special character of the decision that must be made at the first step pursuant to subsection 71(1) must be stressed. That decision is made without a hearing at a time when the applicant has not yet an adversary who opposes his claim and when, in the normal course, there is nothing before the Board except the application for redetermination and the other documents filed by the applicant pursuant to subsection 70(2). The function of the Board at that stage is not to assess and weigh contradictory evidence adduced by parties having divergent interests; it is merely to consider the documentary evidence filed by the applicant in support of his claim pursuant to subsection 70(2) and form an opinion on the chances of success of the application.
I agree with that view of the matter. Accordingly, since at the subsection 71(1) stage the proceeding is not an adversarial one, it follows that material submitted cannot be submitted by a party adverse in interest since there are no adverse parties at that stage.
In considering the issue as to whether or not the letter from the Refugee Status Advisory Commit tee can be considered as "evidence prejudicial to the applicant", as that expression is used in
Saraos, it is instructive, in my view, to consider the history of the procedure developed in the Immigra tion Department to comply with the provisions of subsection 45(5) of the Act, in the light of the jurisprudence of both divisions of this Court. That subsection reads as follows:
45. ...
(5) When the Minister makes a determination with respect to a person's claim that he is a Convention refugee, the Minister shall thereupon in writing inform the senior immigra tion officer who conducted the examination under oath respect ing the claim and the person who claimed to be a Convention refugee of his determination.
It is to be noted that the subsection itself simply requires the Minister to notify the senior immigra tion officer who conducted the examination under oath and the applicant, in writing, of his determi nation of the applicant's application for Conven- tion-refugee status. However, the Trial Division of this Court, in the case of Brempong v. Refugee Status Advisory Committee, et al., 9 granted an order requiring the Minister to send or deliver to the applicant, in writing, the reasons for his deter mination that the applicant was not a Convention refugee. A perusal of the reasons in that case reveals that counsel for the Minister, in those proceedings, argued that nothing in the scheme of the statute required the Minister to provide rea sons to the applicant for his determination, since subsection 45(5) requires only that the applicant and the applicable senior immigration officer be informed of that determination. Notwithstanding those submissions, the learned Trial Judge con cluded that the refusal to give the applicant the Minister's reasons for his decision that the appli cant was not a Convention refugee amounted to unfair treatment which might prejudice a full and fair redetermination hearing, and on this basis he issued the order referred to supra. That decision of the Trial Division was not appealed to this Court (although a notice of appeal had been filed and withdrawn for some unspecified reason). However, the applicant did file a section 28 application in this Court to review and set aside the Minister's
9 [l980] 2 F.C. 316; 109 D.L.R. (3d) 664 (T.D.).
determination. 10 The Court held that since the decision impeached was a purely administrative one not required by law to be made on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis, it was without jurisdiction to consider the application. Urie J., in delivering the reasons of the Court, stated at pages 213 and 214:
As a result of an application filed on behalf of the applicant herein, the Trial Division granted an order that the Minister of Employment and Immigration send or deliver to the applicant or his counsel, in writing, the reasons for his determination that the applicant is not a Convention refugee. With respect, I have grave doubts as to the propriety of requiring the Minister to. give such reasons. However, that question is not one upon which we are called to make a decision in this application. The order also provided that until the applicant or his counsel have received the said reasons and have been given a reasonable opportunity to submit to the respondent Immigration Appeal Board responses to the Minister's reasons, the Board is prohib ited from considering the application of the applicant for redetermination of his claim that he is a Convention refugee. We were advised by counsel that an appeal from this order was filed but, for some unspecified reason, it has been withdrawn. In compliance with the order, the Minister apparently provided reasons for his decision but they are not part of the record in this application, although they ought to have been if we are properly to consider this application on its merits since what was said by the Minister forms the basis of the attack on his determination of the issue before him.
Accordingly, it is clear to me that, prior to the Trial Division judgment in Brempong (supra), the Minister's practice was to not provide to the appli cant any reasons for his section 45 determination, but that thereafter and pursuant to that judgment, the practice has been changed so that, in all subsequent cases that I have seen, the Minister's reasons for the section 45 determination are trans mitted to the applicant. It also seems clear that the policy was further altered, so that in cases where the applicant has applied to the Immigration Appeal Board for a redetermination of his refugee claim, copies of the Minister's letter to the appli cant notifying him of his decision and containing the reasons therefor are also, invariably, sent to the Board. It seems likely, in my view, that this change of procedure was prompted by the views of
10 Brempong v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [198111 F.C. 211 (C.A.)
this Court, as expressed in Brempong (supra), that the Minister's reasons should have been part of the record on the section 28 application which sought to review and set aside the Minister's decision, because what was said by the Minister formed the basis of the attack on his determination of the issue before him. Is the situation any different where, as in the case at bar, the issue is not the propriety of the inclusion in the record before this Court of the Minister's reasons, but the propriety of their inclusion in the record before the Immi gration Appeal Board in a redetermination by it pursuant to sections 70 and 71? In my view, the rationale adopted by this Court in Brempong (supra) applies equally to the situation in the case at bar, where the contents of the record before the Board are in issue. I say this after a consideration of the statutory scheme. Pursuant to section 45, the applicant initially makes his refugee claim to the Minister. Upon receipt of the claim, the appli cant is examined under oath by a senior immigra tion officer respecting his claim. The transcript of that examination, together with the claim, are then forwarded to the Minister. A copy of the transcript and the claim is forwarded to the Refugee Status Advisory Committee for their consideration. After having obtained the Committee's advice, the Min ister is required to determine whether or not the applicant is a Convention refugee. Sections 70 and 71 of the Act provide a procedure whereby the applicant may apply to the Immigration Appeal Board for a redetermination of his claim in cases where the Minister has dismissed that claim.
In my view, that redetermination is, in essence, a review of the Minister's decision. Neither the statute nor the regulations provide a definition of "redetermination" as used in this statutory scheme. However, The Living Webster Encyclope dic Dictionary of the English Language gives the following definition of "redetermine": "... To come again to a decision; to ascertain after reinvestigation." I think the Board is required to review the Minister's decision and to come to its
own opinion as to the correctness of that decision. Subsection 70(2) stipulates only the material which the applicant shall place before the Board for its consideration—namely, the application, the transcript of the applicant's examination under oath and the applicant's statutory declaration in support of his claim. I can find nothing in the statutory language which specifically prohibits the presence on the record before the Board of the Minister's reasons. Indeed, it seems to me that, since the Board's function under sections 70 and 71 is to review the Minister's decision, the reasons for that decision are a necessary part of the record before the Board. It is entirely possible, for exam ple, that the reasons given by the Minister will form at least a part of the attack on the decision given by him." Accordingly, in my view, the rea soning set out by Urie J. in Brempong (supra) has equal application to this factual situation.
I referred earlier to the Saraos case, where Pratte J. held that a decision of the Immigration Appeal Board should be set aside where evidence prejudicial to an applicant was considered by the Board without his consent. In that case, the facts were quite different from those at bar. In that case, during the course of the examination under oath, the applicant's brother-in-law was allowed to testify and his evidence became part of the ma terial before the Board. In my view, the Saraos decision must be evaluated in the light of that factual situation. Sworn testimony by someone other than the applicant is clearly evidence, and evidence not contemplated under sections 70 and 71. However, the decision of the Minister and his reasons therefor are, in my view, of quite a
" The only previous case of which I am aware where the propriety of including in the record before the Immigration Appeal Board the Minister's reasons for his determination was challenged, is the case of Diaz v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1981] 2 F.C. 188 (C.A.). In Diaz at least two paragraphs of the applicant's declaration were, in the Court's view, rebuttals of the Minister's reasons. Similarly, in the case at bar, I think that paragraph 4 of the applicant's declaration refers directly to the first reason given by the Minister in his letter to the applicant, and can be said to be a response to or rebuttal of that reason.
different character, and are easily distinguished from the "evidence" referred to in the Saraos case.
When a quasi-judicial or a judicial tribunal is empowered by statute to review and sit in judg ment on the actions of another tribunal, be it administrative or otherwise, it seems to me that there is an implicit right in the reviewing authority to peruse and consider any reasons for decision given by the tribunal being reviewed, in the absence of an express statutory provision to the contrary. As stated supra, there is no such express statutory prohibition in the Immigration Act, 1976 or in the regulations promulgated thereunder. Nor do I think that because the Board is required to review the Minister's decision but on an enlarged record, 12 that such a circumstance changes the nature of the function being performed by the Board so as to render inadmissible before it the reasons of the tribunal being reviewed.
For these reasons, I have concluded that there was nothing improper in the inclusion of the Min ister's letter as part of the material before the Immigration Appeal Board. I would therefore allow the section 28 application, set aside the Board's decision and refer the matter back to the Board for reconsideration on the basis that the memorandum of March 17, 1981, from B. Mait- land to the Manager, Canada Immigration Centre, Edmonton, should not form a part of the material to be considered by the Board on its reconsidera tion of the application for redetermination.
PRIMROSE D.J.: I concur.
12 1 refer to the applicant's statutory declaration which is required pursuant to subsection 70(2) of the Act.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.