Date: 20100108
Docket: T-1053-09
Citation: 2010 FC 25
Ottawa, Ontario, January 08,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
SHAHIDA NAVID BHATTI
Applicant
and
MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
Shahida Navid Bhatti
(the Applicant) appeals pursuant to subsection 14(5) of the Citizenship Act,
R.S.C. 1985 c. C-29 (the Act) the Citizenship Judge’s decision on May
14, 2009 denying her application for citizenship. She comes to this Court
unrepresented and is not fluent in English. I granted leave to her daughter,
Reema Navid, to assist her.
Background
[2]
Shahida
Navid Bhatti is a 50 year old woman from Pakistan. Her mother tongue is Urdu.
She landed in Canada on August 5, 2002, became a permanent resident and applied
for citizenship on July 31, 2007 along with other members of her family.
[3]
Ms. Bhatti suffers from
high blood pressure and diabetes. She is also at risk of going blind and
suffers from poor eyesight. These conditions require different treatments which
she finds arduous and painful.
[4]
On
March 17, 2009, she was given notice of her scheduled citizenship hearing. She
was advised “You will be asked questions to determine if you have an adequate knowledge
of English or French and an adequate knowledge of Canada.” Ms. Bhatti appeared
before the Citizenship Judge on April 8, 2009.
Decision Under Review
[5]
The
Citizenship Judge advised in the Notice to the Minister:
The Applicant has not met the
language & knowledge requirements. See attached tasks for details.
(emphasis in the original)
[6]
The
attached Schedule “A” stated:
At the Hearing the Applicant could not
verify information on the application or answer simple questions in English.
[7]
The
Schedule also states the Applicant could not correctly answer questions from
three out of seven categories: Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, voting
procedures pertaining to elections in Canada, and Canada’s Social and
Political History and its Geography.
[8]
In
the letter advising Ms. Bhatti of his decision, the Citizenship Judge stated he
found Ms. Bhatti did not have an adequate knowledge of English or French. He
referred to section 14 of the Citizenship Regulations (the Regulations)
requiring she understand basic spoken statements. He explained:
At the hearing, you could not verify
information on the application or answer simple questions in English.
[9]
The
Citizenship Judge also found Ms. Bhatti failed to achieve a passing grade on
the knowledge test.
[10]
Finally,
the Citizenship Judge stated, pursuant to section 15(1) of the Act, he
considered whether to recommend the Minister exercise discretion and grant
citizenship by waiving the language and knowledge requirements as provided for
under subsection 5(3) for compassionate grounds, or recommending citizenship
pursuant to subsection 5(4) to alleviate special and unusual hardship. He
concluded there was no evidence presented at the hearing that would justify
such a recommendation.
[11]
I
have decided to grant the appeal and refer the matter to a different
citizenship judge for redetermination. I add proper consideration should be
given to a favourable recommendation for Ministerial discretion pursuant either
to subsection 5(3) or 5(4) of the Act.
Legislation
[12]
The
relevant provisions of the Act are:
5. (1) The Minister
shall grant citizenship to any person who
(a) makes application
for citizenship;
…
(d) has an adequate
knowledge of one of the official languages of Canada;
(e) has an adequate
knowledge of Canada and of the responsibilities and privileges of
citizenship; and
…
(3) The Minister may,
in his discretion, waive on compassionate grounds,
(a) in the case of any
person, the requirements of paragraph (1)(d) or (e);
…
(4) In order to
alleviate cases of special and unusual hardship or to reward services of an
exceptional value to Canada, and notwithstanding any other provision of this
Act, the Governor in Council may, in his discretion, direct the Minister to
grant citizenship to any person and, where such a direction is made, the
Minister shall forthwith grant citizenship to the person named in the
direction.
14. (3) Where a
citizenship judge does not approve an application under subsection (2), the
judge shall forthwith notify the applicant of his decision, of the reasons
therefore and of the right to appeal.
…
15. (1) Where a
citizenship judge is unable to approve an application under subsection 14(2),
the judge shall, before deciding not to approve it, consider whether or not
to recommend an exercise of discretion under subsection 5(3) or (4) or
subsection 9(2) as the circumstances may require.
|
5. (1) Le ministre attribue la
citoyenneté à toute personne qui, à la fois :
a) en fait la demande;
…
d) a une connaissance suffisante de
l’une des langues officielles du Canada;
e) a une connaissance suffisante du
Canada et des responsabilités et avantages conférés par la citoyenneté;
...
(3) Pour des raisons d’ordre
humanitaire, le ministre a le pouvoir discrétionnaire d’exempter:
a) dans tous les cas, des conditions
prévues aux alinéas (1)d) ou e);
…
(4) Afin de remédier à une situation
particulière et inhabituelle de détresse ou de récompenser des services
exceptionnels rendus au Canada, le gouverneur en conseil a le pouvoir
discrétionnaire, malgré les autres dispositions de la présente loi,
d’ordonner au ministre d’attribuer la citoyenneté à toute personne qu’il
désigne; le ministre procède alors sans délai à l’attribution.
14. (3) En cas de rejet de la demande,
le juge de la citoyenneté en informe sans délai le demandeur en lui faisant
connaître les motifs de sa décision et l’existence d’un droit d’appel.
...
15. (1) Avant de rendre une décision de
rejet, le juge de la citoyenneté examine s’il y a lieu de recommander
l’exercice du pouvoir discrétionnaire prévu aux paragraphes 5(3) ou (4) ou
9(2), selon le cas.
|
Citizenship
Regulations, (SOR/93-246):
14.
The criteria for determining whether a person has an adequate knowledge of
one of the official languages of Canada are, based on
questions prepared by the Minister,
(a)
that the person comprehends, in that language, basic spoken statements and
questions; and
(b)
that the person can convey orally or in writing, in that language, basic
information or answers to questions.
|
14.
Une personne possède une connaissance suffisante de l’une des langues
officielles au Canada si, à l’aide de questions rédigées par le ministre, il
est établi à la fois:
a)
qu’elle comprend, dans cette langue, des déclarations et des questions
élémentaires;
b)
que son expression orale ou écrite dans cette langue lui permet de
communiquer des renseignements élémentaires ou de répondre à des questions.
|
Issues
[13]
I
find there are two issues on this appeal. The first is pleaded by Ms. Bhatti
and essentially asks this court to find the decision of the Citizenship Judge
was unreasonable with regards to the language and knowledge test, and alleges a
failure for not waiving these requirements on the grounds of compassion or
recommending citizenship to alleviate special and unusual hardship. I find
there is a second issue with regard to the adequacy of the Citizenship Judge’s
reasons.
Standard of Review
[14]
This
is an appeal of a decision by a citizenship judge. I cite Mr. Justice Michael
Kelen’s concise survey of the law concerning the appropriate standard of review
in Amoah v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 775 at paragraphs 14 and 15.
“This Court has held that the standard of review for the
decision of a citizenship
judge is reasonableness: Zhao v. Canada (MCI),
2006 FC 1536, 306 F.T.R. 206, per Russell J. at para. 45; Chen
v. Canada (MCI), 2006 FC 85, 145 A.C.W.S. (3d) 770, per Phelan J. at
para. 6. Prior to Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008
SCC 9, discretionary decisions under subsection 5(3) and 5(4) were also subject
to a patent unreasonableness standard: Arif v. Canada
(MCI), 2007 FC 557, 157 A.C.W.S. (3d) 557, per Blais J. at para. 8.
In Dunsmuir, the Supreme Court eliminated the
patent unreasonableness standard of review. Post-Dunsmuir,
the appropriate standard of review for all decisions of a citizenship judge is reasonableness simpliciter: Canada (MCI) v. Aratsu,
2008 FC 1222, per Russell J. at paras. 16-20.
In reviewing the Citizenship Judge's decision on a reasonableness standard, the
Court will consider "the existence of justification, transparency and
intelligibility within the decision-making process" and "whether the
decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of the facts and law" (Dunsmuir
at para. 47). The Court will only intervene if the decision falls outside the
"range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of
the facts and law" (Dunsmuir at paragraph
47).”
[15]
Interpretation
of statute is a question of law, reviewable on a standard of correctness to
which citizenship judges are afforded no deference: Dunsmuir. Finally,
questions of procedural fairness are questions of law and therefore reviewable
on a standard of correctness: Pourzand v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 FC 395 at para. 21.
Analysis
[16]
Ms.
Bhatti acknowledges she is not fluent in English. However, her submissions
before me were read slowly, at a measured pace, with excellent enunciation and
correct pronunciation. Ms. Bhatti asserts she is knowledgeable enough about
Canada and the responsibilities of citizenship to become a Canadian. She says
she answered the Citizenship Judge’s questions correctly. She says she told him
about her family, her medical hardships including her high blood pressure, her
diabetes, her weekly painful eye laser treatments (panretinal photocoagulation)
and her high risk of blindness. She says he appeared to believe her and did not
ask for proof of medical hardship. She believes the Citizenship Judge refused
her application for citizenship because she “answered to his questions in short
form”, and not in the full sentences she says the judge asked her for. She
concluded by stating all her family in Canada are citizens except her. She was
not a citizen because, as she says, “I am 27 years diabetes, no good my
vision.”
[17]
Reema Navid, Ms.
Bhatti’s daughter, said she was present at her mother’s citizenship hearing.
She says her mother answered questions correctly and in short form. Ms. Navid
also said her mother told the Citizenship Judge everything about her laser
treatments, her diabetes and her high blood pressure. She says her mother could
not see the questions of the Citizenship Knowledge Test because the font was
too small. She held her mother’s prepared submission up before me; they were
printed in a very large font and Ms. Navid explained it was the only size her
mother could read. She said of her mother: “She can’t really see.”
[18]
Ms.
Bhatti came to this Court self represented. Her understanding of its procedures
is less than rudimentary and the case she presented is fundamentally defective.
Much of what would have been her evidence was submitted as argument. Evidence
on an appeal consists of the Record and the affidavits. Submissions are not
evidence. The Court has an obligation to make some accommodations for
self-represented litigants. But this obligation cannot extend to ignoring rules
of evidence: Scheunaman v. Canada
(Human Resources Development), 2003
FCT 37 at para. 4; Kalevar v. Liberal Party of Canada, 2001 FCT 1261
paras. 22-26; Gilling v. Canada, [1998] F.C.J. No. 952 (QL) at para.1;
and Jones v. Canada, 2009 FC 46 at para. 29.
[19]
Ms.
Bhatti’s story as provided in her submissions, the questions posed to her and
her responses, her health ailments and their bearing on her vision, her painful
eyesight treatments, reading, the citizenship granted to all her family
members, are not in her affidavit. The additional information submitted by her
daughter similarly is not presented by affidavit.
[20]
The
Minister is correct in asserting none of this is admissible evidence before the
Court. The Minister is entitled to only respond to the evidence properly before
the Court in this appeal.
[21]
Ms.
Bhatti’s affidavit includes medical letters and reports concerning her health
problems. Again the Minister is correct in submitting this evidence cannot be
considered since it is all dated after Ms. Bhatti’s citizenship hearing on
April 8, 2009. This appeal is not an appeal de novo and the appeal must
proceed on the Record that was before the Citizenship Judge. Zhao v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) 2006 FC 1536.
[22]
Finally,
Ms. Bhatti says she alerted the Citizenship Judge to her high blood pressure
and diabetes, but he did not ask for more information. However, Ms. Bhatti does
not say in her affidavit she informed the Citizenship Judge about her problems
with her vision and its impact on her ability to study and respond to the
language and knowledge requirements. The Citizenship Judge stated he found no
evidence to justify making a recommendation to the Minister to waive the
language or knowledge requirements on the grounds of compassion or recommend
citizenship to alleviate special and unusual hardship.
[23]
There
is simply not enough evidence to judge the reasonableness of the Citizenship
Judge’s decision.
[24]
This
brings me to the second issue. The Citizenship Judge is required by subsection
14(3) of the Act to provide reasons when
an application for citizenship is denied.
[25]
Justice Russell in Pourzand v. Canada (MCI), 2008 FC 395 at
paragraph 21 has
characterized the failure to provide adequate reasons as a
question of procedural fairness and natural justice
reviewable on a standard of correctness:
Procedural
fairness questions are pure questions of law reviewable on a correctness
standard. … The third issue raised concerning the adequacy of reasons is also a
question of procedural fairness and natural justice and is also reviewable on a
standard of correctness (Andryanov v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] F.C.J. No. 272, 2007 FC 186 at
para. 15; Jang v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) (2004), 250 F.T.R. 303, 2004 FC 486 at para. 9; Adu v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] F.C.J. No. 693, 2005 FC 565 at
para.
9).
[26]
Justice Blanchard in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration)
v. Li, 2008 FC 275 at paragraph 6 states reasons must be sufficient to enable the
appeal court to
discharge its appellate function, a reviewable error is
committed by a failure of a citizenship judge to provide
insufficient reasons for a decision:
The Act imposes a
statutory obligation on citizenship judges to provide reasons for their decisions.
The reasons must be sufficient to enable the appeal court to discharge its
appellate function. The jurisprudence has established that a citizenship judge
commits a reviewable error by failing to provide sufficient reasons for a decision.
See: Seiffert v. Canada (M.C.I.), [2005] F.C. J. No. 1326, at para. 9 and Ahmed v.
Canada (M.C.I.), [2002]
F.C.J. No. 1415,at para. 12.
[27]
The
Citizenship Judge provided only cursory reasons to find Ms. Bhatti’s knowledge
of English inadequate. Restating these reasons:
At the hearing, you could not verify
information on the application or answer simple questions in English. (emphasis added)
[28]
A
review of the Record discloses that the Citizenship Officer who reviewed the
file found Ms. Bhatti’s knowledge of English to be “satisfactory”. The
Citizenship Judge is within his right to administer an oral test after the
applicant had passed the written test of her knowledge of an official language,
Liu v. Canada, 2008 FC 836 but his reasons must explain how he found Ms.
Bhatti’s language inadequate.
[29]
The
Citizenship Judge stated Ms. Bhatti could not “verify” information on her
application. Verification is not necessarily a language test since to verify is
to establish truth or validity of something: Canadian Oxford Dictionary (2d
Edition). The criteria established by section 14 of the Regulations for
determining a person has an adequate knowledge of one of the official languages
are that a person comprehends basic spoken statements and questions and can
answer orally or in writing basic information. This criteria does not require
verification of information.
[30]
In
addition, the Citizenship Judge did not explain what “simple questions” were
not answered by Ms. Bhatti. Without more, I have no way to reconcile the
contradiction between the evidence on Record showing Ms. Bhatti’s language is
satisfactory and the Citizenship Judge’s finding it isn’t.
[31]
As
for the results of the Knowledge Test, the Record is of no assistance since the
Minister exercised his rights under rule 318(2) of the Federal Court Rules,
(SOR/98-106)
objecting to the release of the questions and answers with
regard to the test of Ms. Bhatti’s knowledge of Canada. The
Respondent argues releasing these questions would undermine the secrecy of the
test since others could memorize the question sheet. I understand the
Minister’s concern, but without the test before me I cannot assess a
Citizenship Judge’s assertions concerning the Applicant’s results.
[32]
Finally,
Ms. Bhatti submitted copies of medical reports as exhibits to her affidavit.
They confirm Ms. Bhatti has serious medical problems. In a letter dated July 5,
2009, an ophthalmic medical doctor reports Ms. Bhatti has significant diabetic
retinopathy, a condition which pre-existed the citizenship hearing date of
April 8, 2009. While this evidence would not have been before the Citizenship
Judge, I am satisfied Ms. Bhatti suffered from this condition prior to the
citizenship hearing. Ms. Bhatti’s impaired sight was demonstrated by the
inordinately large print font Ms. Bhatti required to read her submissions in
Court; a copy of which has been filed.
[33]
While
the Citizenship Judge found there was no reason presented at the hearing to
justify recommending the Minister waive the language or knowledge requirements,
I accept Ms. Bhatti’s medical condition is serious. Her vision problems would impede
her preparation for citizenship. This was not in evidence at the citizenship
hearing but should be since these problems make it difficult for her to study
and perform any written form of a knowledge test.
[34]
Ms.
Bhatti’s medical conditions, particularly with respect to her problems with her
eyesight, are factors that should be considered in the course of a citizenship
hearing.
Conclusion
[35]
The appeal is granted. The matter
is to be remitted to another citizenship judge with directions to consider
recommending the Minister waive the knowledge test on compassionate grounds or recommend
citizenship to alleviate special and unusual hardship.
[36]
In
the new hearing, Ms. Bhatti is to submit
medical reports, with interpretations ordinary people can understand, relating
to her eyesight problems and medical health to form the record before the next citizenship
judge.
[37]
Given Ms. Bhatti was self
represented, I make no order for costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that
1.
The
appeal is granted.
2.
The matter is to be remitted to
another citizenship judge with a directions to consider recommending the
Minister waive the knowledge test on compassionate grounds pursuant to
subsection 5(3) of the Citizenship Act or recommend citizenship to
alleviate special and unusual hardship pursuant to subsection 5(4) of the same
act.
3.
I
make no order as to costs.
___”Leonard S. Mandamin”____
Judge