i can be a little more specific.
the tenant
alleges in the request for review that the application should have been
dismissed pursuant to section 83 of the residential tenancies act, 2006.
this is incomplete - 83(3), precisely.
first, if
the tenant did not raise the specific argument at the hearing, it
should have and could have been and therefore is not properly considered
on review (my emphasis).
this
is kind of a half-truth, as the adjudicator has specific
responsibilities under s. 83. you don't get to get away with an error in
law because nobody pointed it out before hand; it's still an error in
law and still justifies a review. it's true that i can't change my
argument in review. but, the law remains the law, regardless.
but, the conditional clause here is false, because i did raise
the specific argument at the hearing, which is what i put up for review
in the first place. and, i pointed this out in the review body in two
different ways. short of presenting audio evidence from the trial -
which i will need to do on appeal, apparently - there isn't anything
more convincing that i could have done to demonstrate this. but, a
request for review is just that. a verbal or written rebuttal of this
sort should, in truth, be enough to get back in front of a judge;
we then determine whether i did or did not raise the argument at this
point by going over the evidence that was presented and by listening to
the audio of the tapes.
to claim that if i
didn't raise the argument then the review is improper is an almost true
statement, granted. but, that's the question we're trying to determine:
it's what the review is meant to come to an answer on. i claim i did raise the argument. so, the reviewer is supposed to get us back in front of a judge to figure it out.
her formal argument is in the form of:
1. x ----> y
2. y
i
don't dispute (1). but deducing (2) is a logical error because x has
not been demonstrated, which is what the review is supposed to
determine.
so, she's assuming the result of the review, rather than conducting it. and, that's misconduct on her behalf.
second,
in paragraphs 21 to 23 the hearing member specifically turns her mind
to the issue of section 83 and provides a detailed analysis.
see,
now the fact that she dropped 83(3) previously is important, as this is
a red herring - the discussion in 21 to 23 was about 83(1).
the hearing member has a broad discretion in issuing her order.
in
fact, she does not. the case law is quite explicit that the clauses in
83(3) require hard stops. if there is any evidence that the action is
being brought in retaliation, the adjudicator must dismiss - and she
does not have discretion in balancing or weighing other interests
against it. this is the importance of the evidence i've cited, which was
ignored. and, it's the importance of this member being selective in the
way she wrote her denial.
this board member obviously
did not listen to the audio of the trial. she's essentially arguing from
a point of ignorance, and making the assumption that the ruling was
correct. then, she's producing very shoddy arguments to try and get to
that predetermined conclusion.
i have no choice but to appeal.