Date: 20100316
Docket: IMM-3307-09
Citation: 2010 FC 306
Ottawa, Ontario, March 16,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Mandamin
BETWEEN:
SHALINI KUMAR
VINEET KUMAR
ARYAN KUMAR
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
The
Applicants seek judicial review of the decision of P. Purcell, Second
Secretary, Immigration, (the Officer) received on or about May 29, 2009
rejecting Ms. Shalini Kumar’s application for a permanent residence visa in Canada as a member of the
skilled worker class.
[2]
Ms. Shalini
Kumar, a citizen of India, submitted an
application for a visa under the skilled workers class. She included in her
application her spouse, Vineet Kumar, and child, Aryan. Ms. Kumar submits she
is employed as an office manager in a family business and included
documentation about her employment and income in her application.
[3]
The
Officer rejected the application because she was not satisfied Ms. Kumar had the
necessary experience and at least one year of continuous paid work experience.
[4]
For
reasons that are set out below, I am granting the judicial review.
BACKGROUND
[5]
Ms.
Kumar applied to the Canadian High Commission in New Delhi for permanent residency in Canada as a skilled worker in
November 2008. Her application indicated she is an office manager at Anand
Pharmaceutical Distributor (APD). Her brother-in-law, Vipin Kumar owns this
company. He transferred control of the company via a power of attorney to his
brother, Vineet, the Applicant’s husband.
[6]
The
Applicant submitted a letter from her employer describing in general terms her
responsibilities and her salary at APD. The descriptions are in point form as
follows:
i.
Maintenance of
Inventory and Records (Sale, Purchase, Debit Note & Credit Note)
ii.
General
Administration of the concern.
iii.
General [sic]
deligation of work among staff.
iv.
Banking (Submission
of Cash, Cheques, Bank Statements)
v.
Correspondence with
[sic] Depott Manager, Regional Manager Zone Sales Manager, Stockist (MNC’s).
[7]
The
employer’s letter concludes: “She is getting 1,08,000.00 (Rupees One Lac Eight
Thousand only) per annum. She is very sincere, honest and hard working.”
[8]
The
Applicant included a job offer letter from the Spice Centre in Edmonton, and an Arranged
Employment Opinion Confirmation from Human Resources Development Canada.
[9]
Finally,
Ms. Kumar included copies of her tax statements for the assessment years 2004
-2009 which reflect her income.
[10]
The
Officer was not satisfied with the confirmation of the Applicant’s employment
and perceived discrepancies in income claimed from employment.
LEGISLATION
[11]
The Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, (2001, c. 27) (IRPA) provides:
12. (2) A
foreign national may be selected as a member of the economic class on the
basis of their ability to become economically established in Canada.
|
12.
(2) La sélection des étrangers de la catégorie « immigration économique » se
fait en fonction de leur capacité à réussir leur établissement économique au
Canada.
|
[12]
The Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, (SOR/2002-227) (IRPA Regulations)
provide:
75. (1) For
the purposes of subsection 12(2) of the Act, the federal skilled worker class
is hereby prescribed as a class of persons who are skilled workers and who
may become permanent residents on the basis of their ability to become
economically established in Canada and who intend to reside in a province
other than the Province of Quebec.
(2) A foreign
national is a skilled worker if
(a) within the
10 years preceding the date of their application for a permanent resident
visa, they have at least one year of continuous full-time employment
experience, as described in subsection 80(7), or the equivalent in continuous
part-time employment in one or more occupations, other than a restricted
occupation, that are listed in Skill Type 0 Management Occupations or Skill
Level A or B of the National Occupational Classification matrix;
(b) during
that period of employment they performed the actions described in the lead
statement for the occupation as set out in the occupational descriptions of
the National Occupational Classification; and
(c) during
that period of employment they performed a substantial number of the main
duties of the occupation as set out in the occupational descriptions of the
National Occupational Classification, including all of the essential duties.
|
75.
(1) Pour l’application du paragraphe 12(2) de la Loi, la catégorie des
travailleurs qualifiés (fédéral) est une catégorie réglementaire de personnes
qui peuvent devenir résidents permanents du fait de leur capacité à réussir
leur établissement économique au Canada, qui sont des travailleurs qualifiés
et qui cherchent à s’établir dans une province autre que le Québec.
(2)
Est un travailleur qualifié l’étranger qui satisfait aux exigences suivantes
:
a)
il a accumulé au moins une année continue d’expérience de travail à temps
plein au sens du paragraphe 80(7), ou l’équivalent s’il travaille à temps
partiel de façon continue, au cours des dix années qui ont précédé la date de
présentation de la demande de visa de résident permanent, dans au moins une
des professions appartenant aux genre de compétence 0 Gestion ou niveaux de
compétences A ou B de la matrice de la Classification nationale des professions
— exception faite des professions d’accès limité;
b)
pendant cette période d’emploi, il a accompli l’ensemble des tâches figurant
dans l’énoncé principal établi pour la profession dans les descriptions des
professions de cette classification;
c)
pendant cette période d’emploi, il a exercé une partie appréciable des
fonctions principales de la profession figurant dans les descriptions des
professions de cette classification, notamment toutes les fonctions
essentielles.
|
DECISION
UNDER REVIEW
[13]
The
Officer found the Applicant did not meet the requirements in section 75(2) of
the IRPA Regulations. She found the Applicant failed to establish she had at
least one year of continuous paid work experience.
[14]
The
Officer reached this conclusion in spite of the APD employment letter to the
contrary. The Officer found the letter lacked credibility because the descriptions
lacked detail and there was no printed name below an illegible signature. She
also found discrepancies between the employment letter and the Applicant’s tax
information, specifically, the salary and dates of employment did not seem to
correspond.
[15]
The
Officer noted the Applicant was employed in a business owned by the Applicant’s
brother-in-law and controlled by her husband, but the Officer did not express
any conclusions or inferences with respect to this finding.
STANDARD OF
REVIEW
[16]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, determined
there are two standards of review: correctness and reasonableness. Generally, the
standard of correctness applies to questions of law while the standard of
reasonableness applies to questions of fact or mixed fact and law.
[17]
The
standard of review is reasonableness for questions of fact and mixed fact and
law. Dunsmuir. For a decision to be reasonable, there must be
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision making
process. The decision must fall into a possible range of possible, acceptable
outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and the law. Dunsmuir,
para. 47.
[18]
With
respect to procedural fairness, this Court found in Kastrati v. Dunsmuir,
2008 FC 1141 at para.10:
The
standard of correctness applies to questions of law, of natural justice, or of
procedural fairness while the standard of reasonableness applies to questions
of fact or mixed facts and law.
ANALYSIS
[19]
The
Respondent brought the Court’s attention to a letter addressed to the Applicant
which specifically advised:
The
assessment of your application is based on the documents provided. We have no
obligation to conduct a personal interview to seek any additional information.
…
provide original updated experience and/or employment letters which clearly
describe your job duties for all occupations in which you wish to be assessed.
Your employer should provide specific work related examples of these duties.
[20]
The
Respondent submits the employment letter describing the Applicant’s work duties
is very basic; consisting of five sentences in point form. It fails to indicate
whether the employment is full or part time, whether the Applicant is paid a
salary or shares in commissions. It also did not indicate a progressive
increase in pay. Further, the tax documents did not refer to 108,000 rupees a
year salary or to any progressive change in salary over the previous five years
of employment. The Respondent submits the Officer was not under any obligation
to inform the Applicant of these concerns.
[21]
The
Respondent submits that the Officer’s findings deserve deference and fall
within an acceptable range as contemplated in Dunsmuir.
[22]
In Poon
v. Canada (M.C.I.), (2000), 10 Imm. L. R.
(3d) 75 at para. 12, the Court considered the question of whether an applicant
must be informed of a visa officer’s concerns. It stated:
“The obligation to confront an applicant
with adverse conclusions applies when the conclusions arise from material not
known to the applicant. Where the issue arises out of material provided by the
applicant, there is no obligation to provide an opportunity for explanation
since the provider of the material is taken to know of the contents of the
material. Wang v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration)…”
[23]
The
question becomes more nuanced when adverse conclusions are the result of a
credibility issue arising from an applicant’s materials. Justice Richard Mosley
considered this precise question and found in Rukmangathan v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 284, at paragraph 22 and 23:
22 It is well established that in the context of visa
officer decisions procedural fairness requires that an applicant be given an
opportunity to respond to extrinsic evidence relied upon by the visa officer
and to be apprised of the officer's concerns arising therefrom: Muliadi,
supra. In my view, the Federal Court of Appeal's endorsement in Muliadi,
supra, of Lord Parker's comments in In re H.K. (An Infant), [1967] 2
Q.B. 617, indicates that the duty of fairness may require immigration officials
to inform applicants of their concerns with applications so that an applicant
may have a chance to "disabuse" an officer of such concerns, even
where such concerns arise from evidence tendered by the applicant. Other
decisions of this court support this interpretation of Muliadi, supra.
See, for example, Fong v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1990] 3 F.C. 705 (T.D.), John v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2003] F.C.J. No. 350 (T.D.)(QL) and Cornea
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (2003),
30 Imm. L.R. (3d) 38 (F.C.T.D.), where it had been held that a visa officer
should apprise an applicant at an interview of her negative impressions of
evidence tendered by the applicant.
23
However, this principle of procedural fairness does not stretch to the
point of requiring that a visa officer has an obligation to provide an
applicant with a "running score" of the weaknesses in their
application: Asghar v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1997] F.C.J. No. 1091 (T.D.)(QL) at para. 21 and Liao v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] F.C.J. No. 1926
(T.D.)(QL) at para. 23. And there is no obligation on the part of a visa
officer to apprise an applicant of her concerns that arise directly from the
requirements of the former Act or Regulations: Yu v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration) (1990), 36 F.T.R. 296, Ali v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1998), 151 F.T.R. 1 and Bakhtiania
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] F.C.J. No. 1023
(T.D.)(QL).
(emphasis added)
[24]
Justice
Mosley extensively reviewed the factual underpinnings of other findings with
respect to this question two years later in Hassani v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1283 and concluded:
21 The case law is
not clear regarding when a visa officer's concerns must be put to the applicant
where those concerns are based on the information submitted by the applicant to
the visa officer.
…
24
Having reviewed the
factual context of the cases cited above, it is clear that where a concern
arises directly from the requirements of the legislation or related
regulations, a visa officer will not be under a duty to provide an opportunity
for the applicant to address his or her concerns. Where however the issue is
not one that arises in this context, such a duty may arise. This is often the
case where the credibility, accuracy or genuine nature of information submitted
by the applicant in support of their application is the basis of the visa
officer's concern, as was the case in Rukmangathan, and in John and
Cornea cited by the Court in Rukmangathan, above.
(emphasis
added)
[25]
In
the review of the Applicant’s documents, the Officer wrote in the CAIPS file
notes:
I
have reviewed the evidence as a whole and am not satisfied that the PA has the
work experience indicated in her application package and supporting documents.
Although she has provided an experience certificate in which her duties for
this employer are briefly described, the information in the letter about the
PA’s salary/wages does not correspond with the income tax information she has
also submitted with her application. Of particular note is the discrepancy
between the information provided by the employer which indicates that the PA
began working in 2003 versus the tax documents. There is no tax return on file
for assessment year 2003-2004. According to the documents relating to
assessment year 2004-2005 the PA had no income from salaried employment.
The documentary inconsistencies, combined with the lack of a detailed,
spontaneous description of the PA’s duties as an office manager, as well as the
fact that the only employment letter on file has been provided by an unnamed
signatory, leave me unsatisfied that the PA has the experience indicated on her
applications forms.
(emphasis
added)
[26]
The
Officer took special note of what she found to be a serious discrepancy between
the employer’s letter and the Applicant’s tax returns. However, the Officer
misread the returns which they indicate the “assessment year” is based on a
report of the previous year’s income. So assessment year 2004-2005 is based on
income reported from April 1, 2003 to March 31, 2004. As a result the
Applicant’s income, summarized in the chart below, shows taxable income for
2003-2004 and salary income for 2004-2005 contrary to the Officer’s
conclusions.
Assessment year
|
Income year
|
Salary
|
Business/ Profession
|
Gross
|
2004-2005
|
01/04/03-31/03/04
|
NIL
|
72,460 INR
|
72,460 INR
|
2005-2006
|
01/04/04-31/03/05
|
25,200 INR
|
48,000 INR
|
73,200 INR
|
2006-2007
|
01/04/05-31/03/06
|
60,000 INR
|
76,520 INR
|
136,520 INR
|
2007-2008
|
01/04/06-31/03/07
|
60,000 INR
|
82,520 INR
|
142,520 INR
|
2008-2009
|
01/04/07-31/03/08
|
NA
|
NA
|
156,115 INR
|
Further, the Applicant’s income for 2007-2008,
the year the employment letter was written is in excess of the salaried
employment income of 108,000 rupees a year.
[27]
The
error in interpreting the tax returns underlies the Officer’s questioning of
the Applicant’s documentation.
[28]
The Officer
concluded the Applicant does not have at least one year’s work experience as an
office manager in spite of the Applicant’s documentation. Given the Applicant’s
documentation and the Officer’s CAIPS notes, I can only conclude the Officer
questioned the Applicant’s credibility.
[29]
In Hassani,
Justice Mosley suggests a duty exists under procedural fairness to allow an
Applicant an opportunity to reply where the visa officer’s concern is with
“credibility, accuracy or genuine nature of the information submitted by the
applicant”.
[30]
The
Applicant provided information which, if accepted, supports the application for
a permanent resident visa. The Applicant’s education corresponds to work as an
office manager. The description of employment duties, while listed in point
form, are within the responsibilities outlined in NOC 1221 for Office Manager. Her
taxable income covers several years and does not contradict the employment
letter. In my view, the Applicant should have had the opportunity to respond
to the Officer’s concerns before the decision was made.
[31]
The
application for judicial review is granted.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES that:
1.
This
application for judicial review is allowed.
2.
The
matter is remitted to another Visa Officer.
3.
No
question of general importance is certified.
“Leonard
S. Mandamin”