Date: 20100209
Docket: IMM-3587-09
Citation: 2010 FC 133
Ottawa, Ontario, February 9,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Shore
BETWEEN:
BUONG
NGUYEN
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Overview
[1]
[22] Parliament
has the right to adopt immigration policy and to enact legislation prescribing
the conditions under which non-citizens will be permitted to enter and remain
in Canada. This it has done by
enacting the IRPA: Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) v. Chiarelli, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 711 at
paragraph 27. The IRPA and Regulations made pursuant to paragraphs 14(2)(b)
and (d) thereof, set out a regulatory scheme that essentially controls
the admission of foreign nationals to Canada (Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. de
Guzman, 2004
FC 1276 at paragraph 35).
[23] Family reunification and the best interest of children
are recognized as valid purposes under the IRPA and are to be considered when
relevant. The legislation also has other purposes, one of which is the
maintenance of the integrity of the Canadian refugee protection system.
The Federal Court of Appeal had to consider whether paragraph 117 (9)(d) of the
regulations was ultra vires the IRPA in Azizi v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) 2005
FCA 406. Justice Rothstein, writing for the majority stated the following at
paragraphs 28-29 of his reasons:
[28] Paragraph 117(9)(d) does not bar family reunification.
It simply provides that non-accompanying family members who have not been
examined for a reason other than a decision by a visa officer will
not be admitted as members of the family class. A humanitarian and
compassionate application under section 25 of the IRPA may be made for Mr.
Azizi’s dependants or they may apply to be admitted under another category in
the IRPA.
[29] Mr. Azizi says these are undesirable alternatives. It is
true that they are less desirable from his point of view than had his
dependants been considered to be members of the family class. But it was Mr.
Azizi’s misrepresentation that has caused the problem. He is the author of this
misfortune. He cannot claim that paragraph 117(9)(d) is ultra vires
simply because he has run afoul of it. (My emphasis)
[24] The Court of Appeal has therefore decided that the
impugned regulation is not utltra vires the IRPA particularly in cases
where there is a misrepresentation to immigration authorities. Here, however,
the Applicant did not know of his son’s existence at the time of his
application for permanent residence. He cannot, therefore, be said to have
concealed this information or to have misrepresented his circumstances. In my
view, it matters not whether non-disclosure is deliberate or not. The
regulation is clear, paragraph 117(9)(d) makes no distinction as to the
reason for which an non-accompanying family member of the sponsor was not
disclosed in his application for permanent residence. What matters, is the
absence of examination by an officer that necessarily flows from the
non-disclosure. This interpretation is consistent with the findings of my
Colleague, Justice Mosley in Hong Mei Chen v. M.C.I., 2005 FC 678, where
the scope and effect of the impugned regulation were found not to be limited to
cases of fraudulent non-disclosure. At paragraph 11 of his reasons, my
learned colleague wrote, “… Whatever the motive, a failure to disclose which
prevents the immigration officer from examining the dependent precludes future
sponsorship of that person as a member of the family class.”
[25] The provisions of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations are not inconsistent with the stated purposes and objectives of the
IRPA. I am in agreement with the view expressed by Justice Kelen at paragraph
38 of his reasons in de Guzman, above, that “The objective of family
reunification does not override, outweigh, supersede or trump the basic
requirement that the immigration law must be respected, and administered in an
orderly and fair manner.” Further, in exceptional circumstances where
humanitarian and compassionate factors are compelling, an applicant can seek,
pursuant to s. 25(1) of the IRPA, a ministerial exemption to the statutory and
regulatory requirements for admission to Canada. Such an application remains open to the Applicant. If
successful, the Applicant could be reunited with his son. (Chen, above,
at para. 18).
[26] For the above reasons, I find that the impugned
regulation is not ultra vires the IRPA nor inconsistent with its stated
objectives or purposes.
(Adjani v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
2008 FC 32, 322 F.T.R. 1).
[2]
It
is true that the operation of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 (Regulations) in a particular
case may appear Kafkaesque; however, one must keep in mind that there are other
parts of the immigration system which exist for that very reason, to lessen the
consequences of strict applications of the law in exceptional cases, when
deemed appropriate. Foremost among these is section 25 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA), which gives
the Minister the authority to grant an exemption to any legal requirement on
the basis of humanitarian and compassionate grounds.
[3]
Under the separation of
powers, it is for the discretion of the appropriate representative of the
executive branch of government, in this case the Minister, to decide whether to
grant an exemption and not for a member of the judiciary to conclude otherwise.
II. Introduction
[4]
This is an application
for judicial review pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the IRPA of a June 30,
2009 decision of the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD), Immigration and Refugee
Board of Canada (Board), refusing the Applicant’s application of December 18,
2008 to reinstate a previously withdrawn appeal.
III. Background
[5]
In
February 1993, the Applicant, Mr. Buong Nguyen, immigrated to Canada as a UNHCR
refugee from Vietnam after having been in a refugee camp in Malaysia since 1989.
[6]
In
1988, Mr. Nguyen became involved in a romantic relationship with Ms. Thi Lien
Nguyen, in Vietnam. Their
relationship ended before Mr. Nguyen fled to Malaysia. In 2005, Mr. Nguyen
became aware that he and Ms. Thi Lien Nguyen had a daughter, Thi Dat Nguyen. Ms. Thi
Lien Nguyen had contacted Mr. Nguyen to inform him that she wanted him to
assume custody of their daughter.
[7]
DNA
testing confirms that Thi Dat Nguyen is Mr. Nguyen’s daughter.
[8]
Mr.
Nguyen attempted to sponsor his daughter as a member of the Family Class. The
application was refused on July 6, 2007 because Mr. Nguyen did not declare his
daughter on his original application when he immigrated to Canada and,
therefore, could not sponsor her due to the operation of paragraph 117(9)(d)
of the Regulations which prohibits non-disclosed family members from being
members of the Family Class.
[9]
Mr.
Nguyen filed a Notice of Appeal from the Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC)
decision, on July 31, 2007, but withdrew this appeal, on March 11, 2008,
because the language of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations does not
differentiate between deliberate and non-deliberate non-disclosure of family
members.
[10]
On
December 18, 2008, Mr. Nguyen made an application to reinstate the appeal on
the ground that the decision of the IAD in the case of Amal Othman Faki Aziz
v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, (IAD File No. VA6-02878)
(reasons released on February 1, 2008) is applicable to the facts of this case
and makes it likely that this appeal would succeed.
IV. Decision under Review
[11]
On
June 30, 2009, the IAD denied Mr. Nguyen’s application on the ground that there
was no reasonable likelihood of success if the appeal were reinstated because Aziz,
above, does not apply to the Applicant’s case.
[12]
The
IAD rejected Mr. Nguyen’s submission that it would be “in the interests of
justice” to reinstate the appeal on the grounds that there had been excessive
delay in bringing the application for reinstatement.
[13]
The
application was also denied on the basis that there is Federal Court
jurisprudence indicating that paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations does
not contemplate subjective knowledge of non-disclosure of family members.
[14]
The
IAD distinguished the case of Aziz, above, on the grounds that Mr.
Nguyen does not fit within the group identified in Aziz as disadvantaged
by paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations, namely, UNHCR refugee
claimants who are disadvantaged because they lack knowledge of Canadian law.
The IAD found that Mr. Nguyen did not fit this group because he failed to
disclose the existence of his daughter not because of a lack of knowledge of
Canadian laws, but rather because of a lack of knowledge about his daughter’s
existence.
V. Relevant Legislative Provisions
[15]
Subsection
117(9) of the Regulations states:
Excluded
relationships
(9) A foreign national shall not
be considered a member of the family class by virtue of their relationship to
a sponsor if
(a) the foreign
national is the sponsor's spouse, common-law partner or conjugal partner and
is under 16 years of age;
(b) the foreign
national is the sponsor's spouse, common-law partner or conjugal partner, the
sponsor has an existing sponsorship undertaking in respect of a spouse,
common-law partner or conjugal partner and the period referred to in
subsection 132(1) in respect of that undertaking has not ended;
(c) the foreign
national is the sponsor's spouse and
(i) the sponsor or the
foreign national was, at the time of their marriage, the spouse of another
person, or
(ii) the sponsor has lived
separate and apart from the foreign national for at least one year and
(A) the sponsor is the
common-law partner of another person or the conjugal partner of another
foreign national, or
(B) the foreign national is
the common-law partner of another person or the conjugal partner of another
sponsor; or
(d) subject to subsection (10),
the sponsor previously made an application for permanent residence and became
a permanent resident and, at the time of that application, the foreign
national was a non-accompanying family member of the sponsor and was not
examined.
|
Restrictions
(9) Ne sont pas considérées comme
appartenant à la catégorie du regroupement familial du fait de leur relation
avec le répondant les personnes suivantes :
a) l’époux, le conjoint de
fait ou le partenaire conjugal du répondant s’il est âgé de moins de seize
ans;
b) l’époux, le conjoint de
fait ou le partenaire conjugal du répondant si celui-ci a déjà pris un
engagement de parrainage à l’égard d’un époux, d’un conjoint de fait ou d’un
partenaire conjugal et que la période prévue au paragraphe 132(1) à l’égard
de cet engagement n’a pas pris fin;
c) l’époux du répondant, si,
selon le cas :
(i) le répondant ou cet
époux étaient, au moment de leur mariage, l’époux d’un tiers,
(ii) le répondant a vécu
séparément de cet époux pendant au moins un an et, selon le cas :
(A) le répondant est le
conjoint de fait d’une autre personne ou le partenaire conjugal d’un autre
étranger,
(B) cet époux est le
conjoint de fait d’une autre personne ou le partenaire conjugal d’un autre
répondant;
d) sous réserve du paragraphe (10), dans
le cas où le répondant est devenu résident permanent à la suite d’une demande
à cet effet, l’étranger qui, à l’époque où cette demande a été faite, était
un membre de la famille du répondant n’accompagnant pas ce dernier et n’a pas
fait l’objet d’un contrôle.
|
[16]
Section 51 of the Immigration
Appeal Division Rules, SOR/2002-230 (IAD Rules) states:
Application
to reinstate a withdrawn appeal
51. (1) A person may apply to the
Division to reinstate an appeal that was made by that person and withdrawn.
Form and
content of application
(2)
The person must follow rule 43 and include their contact information in the
application.
Factors
(3)
The Division must allow the application if it is established that there was a
failure to observe a principle of natural justice or if it is otherwise in
the interests of justice to allow the application.
|
Demande de rétablissement d’un appel
51.
(1) Toute personne peut demander à la Section de rétablir l’appel qu’elle a
interjeté et ensuite retiré.
Forme et contenu de la demande
(2) La personne fait sa demande selon la règle 43; elle y
indique ses coordonnées.
Éléments à
considérer
(3) La Section accueille la
demande soit sur preuve du manquement à un principe de justice naturelle,
soit s’il est par ailleurs dans l’intérêt de la justice de le faire.
|
VI. Issues
[17]
(1) Did the IAD
fail to observe the principles of natural justice by refusing to reinstate the
appeal?
(2) Did the IAD
fail to take into account the Applicant’s rights under the Charter of Rights
and Freedoms, Schedule B, Part I to the Canada Act 1982, (U.K.)
1982, c. 11 (Charter)?
(3)
Did
the IAD misapply prior IAD jurisprudence?
(4) Did the IAD commit a reviewable error by failing to take
into consideration the importance of family reunification, as enumerated in subsection
3(1) of the IRPA and the best interests of the child as per the CIC’s IP 5 Manual
and the guiding principles of the Convention on the Rights of the Child?
VII. Standard of Review
[18]
In
the case of Wilks v. Canada (Immigration and
Refugee Board), 2009 FC 306, 243 F.T.R. 194, the court was asked to review
a decision of the IAD to refuse to reinstate an appeal (Wilks at para.
17). The court held that the question of whether to reinstate an appeal is one
of mixed fact and law and that it attracts a standard of review of reasonableness
(Wilks at para. 27).
[19]
In
the case of Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1
S.C.R. 190, the Supreme Court of Canada held that “[w]here the
question is one of fact, discretion or policy, deference will usually apply
automatically” (Dunsmuir at para. 53). When a court determines that a
decision deserves deference, the court will apply the standard of
reasonableness. According to Dunsmuir, when a court applies the reasonableness
standard, intervention is warranted if a decision is outside the realm of
reasonable outcomes, is not intelligible, is not supported by evidence, or is
not defensible in law and on the facts (Dunsmuir at para. 47).
VIII. Summary of the Parties’ Positions
Issue 1: Did the IAD fail to observe
the principles of natural justice by refusing to reinstate the appeal?
[20]
Mr.
Nguyen submits the IAD failed to observe the principle of audi alteram
partem because, in light of the Aziz decision, above, he is entitled
to a fair hearing, as there is a reasonable possibility that the appeal will be
successful if it is heard.
Issue 2: Did the IAD fail to take into
account the Applicant’s rights under the Charter?
[21]
Mr.
Nguyen submits the Aziz decision recognized his right as a member of an
analogous class of protected persons, a UNHCR-accepted refugee, under section
15 of the Charter.
[22]
Mr.
Nguyen contends that the Aziz decision held that in order to respect the
rights of UNHCR-accepted refugees, a narrow exception must be read into paragraph
117(9)(d) of the Regulations because otherwise it would be “too harsh to
prevent a UNHCR-accepted refugee from ever sponsoring a family member if this
individual unknowingly breached the obligation imposed on them to declare
family members”.
Issue 3: Did the IAD
misapply prior IAD jurisprudence?
[23]
Mr.
Nguyen is of the view that the IAD’s decision is unreasonable because it was
made without regard to his Charter rights and the applicable case law. Specifically,
Mr. Nguyen submits the IAD’s holding that it would not be in the interests of
justice to reinstate the appeal is unreasonable; it failed to consider that Aziz
held paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations to be a violation of a
UNHCR-accepted refugee’s Charter rights.
[24]
Mr.
Nguyen argues the IAD was incorrect in distinguishing Aziz from the
present case. He submits that Aziz is applicable to this case because it
took into account all of the difficulties faced by UNHCR-accepted refugees,
especially the ways in which their difficult situations might hinder their
compliance with the requirements of Canadian immigration laws.
[25]
In
addition, Mr. Nguyen submits the IAD misapplied the case of Gomez v. Canada,
(October 24, 2008, (IAD File No. TA8-03348)) which held there is no exception
to the duty to disclose family members pursuant to paragraph 117(9)(d)
of the Regulations. Mr. Nguyen submits that Gomez is factually
distinguishable from the present case because the appellant in Gomez was
aware of the existence of his son prior to landing in Canada and did not
declare him despite having several opportunities to do so. Mr. Nguyen submits
that in this case, the applicant never had an opportunity to declare the
existence of his daughter because of circumstances beyond his control.
(Applicant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law at para. 24).
Issue 4: Did the IAD commit a
reviewable error by failing to take into consideration the importance of family
reunification, as enumerated in subsection 3(1) of the IRPA and the best
interests of the child as per the CIC’s IP 5 Manual and the guiding principles
of the Convention on the Rights of the Child?
[26]
Mr.
Nguyen contends that he assumed guardianship of his daughter in 2006 when he
travelled to Vietnam. He submits
that his daughter is leading a very difficult life in Vietnam without
family support and it was improper for the IAD to disregard the interests of
the daughter when it made its decision not to reinstate the appeal.
[27]
Mr.
Nguyen submits that the IAD should have taken the best interests of the child
and the importance of family reunification into account because these factors
are enumerated in the IRPA. Also, Mr. Nguyen submits that Canada is a signatory
to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Articles 7 and 9 of which
provide that a child has a right to know and be cared for by his/her parents. Mr.
Nguyen concludes that the IRPA clearly states that its provisions must be construed
in a manner that is consistent with international instruments to which Canada is a
signatory, such as the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
[28]
Mr.
Nguyen also contends that the CIC’s IP 5 Manual states that “officers must
consider the best interests of any child directly affect by the decision”. Mr.
Nguyen submits the officer was required by law to follow these guidelines and a
failure to do so can also be characterized as a failure to observe procedural
fairness.
[29]
The
Respondent submits that whether paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations
applies to a set of circumstances is a question of mixed fact and law which
attracts the standard of review of reasonableness.
[30]
The
Respondent cites Rule 51 of the IAD Rules, specifically Rule 51(3), and submits
the decision to reinstate an appeal is discretionary. The Respondent also
submits that the IAD applied the proper test in determining whether it would be
in the best interests of justice to reinstate the appeal.
[31]
The
Respondent concludes by citing the case of Ohanyan v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1078, 151 A.C.W.S. (3d) 273, for the
proposition that the determination of whether it is in the interest of justice
to reinstate an appeal is a discretionary determination of the IAD and leave
must be dismissed if the discretion is reasonably exercised.
[32]
The
Respondent submits that paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations applies
to Mr. Nguyen’s daughter because it does not require the applicant to have
deliberately not disclosed the existence of his or her family members, as was
the case here.
[33]
The
Respondent contends the question of whether subjective knowledge is a
requirement of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations was answered by
the Federal Court in the case of Adjani, above, at paragraphs 29 to 32.
In Adjani the court held that paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations excludes all non-disclosed family members from the Family Class.
[34]
The
Respondent submits the IAD correctly referenced Adjani and distinguished
Aziz, above.
[35]
Mr.
Nguyen contends that, in light of his status as a UNHCR-accepted refugee, it
would be in the interests of justice to allow a reinstatement of his appeal.
[36]
Mr.
Nguyen submits that the IAD decision in Aziz held that paragraph 117(9)(d)
of the Regulations violates his rights under section 15 of the Charter because
of his status as a UNHCR-accepted refugee.
[37]
Mr.
Nguyen argues that Adjani is distinguishable from the present case
because the applicant in Adjani was not a UNHCR-accepted refugee.
[38]
Mr.
Nguyen submits that the case of Ohanyan held that the IRB is required to
weigh all the circumstances of the case in rendering its decision. Mr. Nguyen submits
that the IAD failed to take into account all of the circumstances, particularly
his status as a UNHCR-accepted refugee, surrounding this case and, therefore,
the decision is unreasonable.
[39]
Mr.
Nguyen contends that both the Respondent and the IAD failed to take into
account the policy objective of family reunification, as enumerated in paragraph
3(1)(d) of the IRPA, the best interests of children pursuant to the Convention
on the Rights of the Child, as well as the CIC’s IP 5 Manual.
IX. Analysis
[40]
The
primary issue raised by Mr. Nguyen is whether Aziz is applicable to his
situation.
[41]
In
Aziz, the IAD held that paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations violates
the rights of UNHCR-accepted refugees under section 15 of the Charter because
it fails to take into account the “unique disadvantages faced by prospective
immigrants who are accepted as refugees by the UNHCR and referred to Canada”. The
IAD held that these persons cannot reasonably be expected to have access to
information regarding their obligations under the Canadian immigration system.
The IAD held that paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations violates section
15 because it “applies equally to all permanent resident applicants, without
taking into account the substantive differences between the groups identified
in this analysis”, and this equal application leads to substantively
differential treatment between groups of refugee claimants (Aziz at
para. 37).
[42]
The
comparator groups chosen by the IAD in Aziz were UNHCR-accepted refugee
claimants who are referred to Canada by the UNHCR and persons who make refugee
claims from within Canada or are sponsored from within Canada by an agency
(Aziz at para. 35). The IAD held that the rights of the first group are
violated by paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations because it is not
reasonable to prohibit them from sponsoring their non-disclosed family members
in light of their understandable lack of knowledge of the obligations placed on
them by the Canadian immigration system (Aziz at para. 37).
[43]
It
is noted that the IAD in Aziz stated the following regarding the breadth
of the group in question: “the said analogous group describes a narrow group of
individuals … it is only within the narrow scope of this group that I find
merit – in the framework of the facts of this particular case – to the Charter
challenge in question, within the confines of the Canadian jurisprudence on a section
15 analysis” (Aziz at para. 34). This limitation is a significant
warning sign for anyone seeking to broaden the Aziz precedent.
[44]
In
the decision under review, the IAD distinguished Aziz on the ground
that the applicant does not fit in the disadvantaged group because the group
consists of persons who do not disclose family members because they cannot be
reasonably expected to have knowledge of Canadian immigration laws. In this
case, Mr. Nguyen failed to comply with his obligations because he was unaware
of the existence of his daughter, not because of a lack of knowledge of his
obligations under the Canadian immigration system (Applicant’s Record at p. 9).
[45]
It
is the Court’s conclusion that the IAD properly distinguished Mr. Nguyen’s
situation from the facts of Aziz. It is clear, as the IAD notes, that Aziz
is concerned with UNHCR refugees who are disadvantaged because of their
reasonable lack of knowledge of Canadian immigration law, not their reasonable
lack of knowledge of the existence of family members.
[46]
In
this case, Mr. Nguyen became a permanent resident before he discovered that he
had a daughter. As a result of this, the daughter’s exclusion from the Family
Class was not caused by the strict operation of paragraph 117(9)(d) of
the Regulations, but rather by unfortunate circumstances in his life; therefore,
it is the Court’s conclusion that Mr. Nguyen does not fall within the analogous
group identified in Aziz and paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations does not raise an issue under section 15 of the Charter.
[47]
It
is the Court’s conclusion that the IAD was correct in relying on the precedent
of Adjani. In Adjani, Justice Edmond Blanchard was asked to
certify the following question:
Does subsection 117(9)(d) of the IRPR apply to exclude
non-accompanying family members from membership from the family class in
circumstances where the sponsor was unaware of their existence at the time of
his/her application for Permanent Residence and Landing in Canada?
(Adjani
at para. 29)
[48]
The
court held that this question suggested that an element of subjective knowledge
was required so that deliberate non-disclosure would be required for paragraph
117(9)(d) of the Regulations to exclude someone from the Family Class (Adjani
at para. 30). The court refused to certify the question on the ground that paragraph
117(9)(d) of the Regulations is plain and unambiguous; it does not
contemplate subjective knowledge (Adjani at para. 31). The court
definitively stated that paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations means “[n]on-disclosed,
non-accompanying family members cannot be admitted as members of the family
class” (Adjani at para. 32). It is the Court’s conclusion that Adjani
applies to the Mr. Nguyen’s situation, notwithstanding the IAD’s decision in
Aziz.
Was the IAD incorrect
in distinguishing the case of Gomez v. Canada?
[49]
Mr.
Nguyen submits
that the IAD was incorrect in applying the case of Gomez v. Canada,
October 24, 2008 (IAD File No. TA8-03348) to this case on the ground that the
two are distinguishable. In Gomez, the applicant knew about the
existence of his son but did not disclose this information, thus excluding the
son from the Family Class due to the operation of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations (Gomez, at para. 2). Mr. Nguyen submits that the two cases are distinguishable
because in Gomez, the applicant knew about his son and did not disclose
his existence, whereas in this case, Mr. Nguyen did not disclose the existence of his
daughter because he was unaware she was alive (Applicant’s Memorandum of Fact
and Law at para. 24).
[50]
The
IAD cited Gomez for the proposition that there are no exceptions to the
duty to disclose the existence of family members. It is the Court’s conclusion
that the IAD was correct in citing Gomez because its holding regarding
the duty to disclose was correct, especially in light of the aforementioned
ruling in Adjani. The IAD in Gomez aptly expresses the operation
of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations in the following terms,
“[t]his is a strict question of the application of fact to law. The panel finds
as proven that the applicant is the biological child of the appellant born
prior to his immigration to Canada. He was not declared on his application for permanent
residence” (Gomez at para. 33). It is the Court’s conclusion that these
factors operated to exclude the applicant’s son from obtaining membership in
the Family Class in Gomez and the same factors operate to exclude Mr. Nguyen’s daughter in this case.
Did the IAD commit a reviewable error by
failing to take into consideration the importance of family reunification, as
enumerated in subsection 3(1) of the IRPA and the best interests of the child
as per the CIC’s IP 5 Manual and the guiding principles of the Convention on
the Rights of the Child?
[51]
Mr.
Nguyen submits
the IAD disregarded the best interests of his daughter by refusing to reinstate
the appeal. Mr.
Nguyen also
submits that Articles 7 and 9 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child provide
that a child has the right to know and be cared for by his/her parents and children
shall not be separated from their parents against their will. Mr. Nguyen submits that the IRPA
requires its provisions be construed in a manner that would be consistent with
international instruments to which Canada is a signatory).
[52]
The
compliance of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations with the Convention was
dealt with in De Guzman v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 436, [2006] 3
F.C.R. 655. In that case, counsel argued that paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations
did not
comply with Articles 3(1) and 10 of the Convention. Specifically, Article 3(1)
provides that “[I]n all actions concerning children … by … courts of
law, administrative authorities or legislative bodies…” The court held that not every statutory
provision is required to take into account the “best interests of the child” in
order for the IRPA to comply with the Convention. The court held that the
existence of section 25 makes the IRPA compliant with the Convention because
“it obliges the Minister to consider the best interests of a child when
deciding whether, in his opinion, humanitarian and compassionate circumstances
justify exempting an applicant from the normal selection criteria and granting
permanent residence status” (De Guzman at para. 105).
[53]
The
court also rejected the argument that paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations
does not
comply with Article 10 of the Convention which provides that “applications by a
child or his or her parents to enter or leave a State Party for the purpose of
family reunification shall be dealt with by States Parties in a positive,
humane and expeditious manner” (De Guzman at para. 106). The court
rejected this argument on the same ground as before, namely, that section 25
renders paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations compliant with Article
10 (De Guzman at para. 107).
[54]
In
this case, Mr.
Nguyen argues
that the best interests of the daughter were disregarded by the IAD when it
decided not to reinstate the appeal. It is the Court’s conclusion that the best
interests of a child are not a consideration when determining the application
of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the Regulations and as such, the IAD acted reasonably when
it refused to reinstate the appeal. Paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations
only
operates to exclude persons from the Family Class and does not result in a
complete exclusion from obtaining permanent residence in Canada. Section 25 exists to
lessen the sometimes harsh application of paragraph 117(9)(d) of the
Regulations
and it is
at that stage that the best interests of the child will be considered.
[55]
Similarly,
Mr.
Nguyen submits
that the IRPA is to be construed in accordance with Canada’s international
obligations, specifically Articles 7 and 9 of the Convention. It is the Court’s
conclusion that the IRPA complies with Canada’s obligations under the Convention because section
25 of the IRPA takes those obligations into account. Paragraph 117(9)(d)
of
the Regulations is
a strict provision that serves a specific purpose within the scheme of the IRPA.
Likewise, section 25 also serves the specific purpose of lessening the
sometimes harsh application of strict provisions such as paragraph 117(9)(d)
of
the Regulations.
[56]
Mr.
Nguyen submits
that the IAD erred by failing to consider the importance of the CIC’s IP 5
Manual when it refused to reinstate the appeal. The Court notes that the IP 5
Manual is entitled “Immigrant Applications in Canada made on Humanitarian and
Compassionate Grounds” and deals with the considerations to be taken into
account when determining an application under section 25 (IP 5 Manual at section
5.19). It is the Court’s conclusion that the IAD was not wrong in disregarding
these considerations, as they do not apply to the operation of paragraph
117(9)(d) of the Regulations.
X. Conclusion
[57]
It
is the Court’s conclusion that the IAD did not misapply the law or violate
natural justice when it exercised its discretion to refuse to reinstate Mr. Nguyen’s
appeal.
[58]
The
Respondent cites the case of Ohanyan, above, for the proposition that
the determination of whether it is in the interest of justice to permit a
reinstatement of an appeal is a discretionary determination of the IAD which
requires the Board to weigh all of the circumstances in the case. The court
held that reinstatement is the exception to the norm (Ohanyan at para. 13).
It is the Court’s conclusion that in this case the IAD reasonably exercised its
discretion.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS that
1.
The application for judicial
review be dismissed;
2.
No serious question
of general importance be certified.
“Michel M.J. Shore”