Date: 20100601
Docket: IMM-4499-09
Citation: 2010 FC 599
Toronto, Ontario, June 1,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Snider
BETWEEN:
COMFORT AYERTEY
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
Introduction
[1]
Since 2003, the Applicant has been trying to
sponsor her son to come to Canada from Ghana. Because
her son was over 22 years of age when she applied to sponsor him, he could only
qualify if he could satisfy a visa officer that he was continuously in
full-time studies. As reflected in the officer’s notes from 2004, the visa
officer (the first visa officer) was satisfied that the son was in full-time
study since attaining 22 years of age and, thus, would have met the statutory
requirements for being a “dependent child”, as defined in s. 2 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 (Regulations).
However, the sponsorship application was denied (the first visa officer’s decision)
on the basis that the Applicant was in receipt of social assistance, contrary
to s. 133(1)(k) of the Regulations.
[2]
In a decision dated February 10, 2006 (the first
IAD decision), the Immigration and Refugee Board, Immigration Appeal Division
(IAD) allowed the appeal on the basis that there were “sufficient humanitarian
and compassionate considerations to warrant special relief in light of all the
circumstances of the case”. The IAD returned the matter to the visa officer
with the instructions that “the officer must continue to process the
application in accordance with the reasons of the [IAD]”.
[3]
In the subsequent processing, the son was
interviewed by a second visa officer in 2008. At that time, according to the
officer’s computer assisted immigration processing system (CAIPS) notes, the
son admitted to not being a full-time student since 2000. In a decision
communicated by letter dated July 29, 2008 (the second visa officer’s
decision), the sponsorship application was again rejected. This time, the second
visa officer was not satisfied that the son met the definition of a dependent
child. The officer determined that the son was not a “student” as described in
s. 2 of the Regulations. The Applicant appealed this second visa
officer’s decision to the IAD. The IAD considered the appeal in writing and
rejected the appeal in a decision dated August 11, 2009 (the second IAD
decision). The Applicant seeks judicial review of the second IAD decision.
Issues
[4]
This application raises the following issues:
- Did the IAD err
by failing to conclude that the second visa officer erred by making a new
determination on the status of the son’s studies as of July 29, 2008,
rather than being bound by the 2004 decision of the first visa officer
that the son was a full-time student (and, thus, a dependent child and
member of the family class)?
- If the second
visa officer was not bound by the first IAD decision, did the IAD err by
not concluding that the second visa officer reached a decision that was
not substantiated by the evidence that the Applicant’s son was not in
full-time studies as of July 29, 2008?
Statutory Framework
[5]
According to s. 11(1) of Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (IRPA), a foreign national
must, before entering Canada,
apply to an officer for a visa. The visa shall be issued if, following an
examination, the officer is satisfied that the foreign national is not
inadmissible and meets the requirements of IRPA.
[6]
Under s. 12(1) of IRPA, a foreign
national, such as the Applicant’s son, may be selected as a member of a family
class based on his parent-child relationship to the Applicant, who is a
Canadian citizen. Section 117(1)(b) of the Regulations defines a member
of the family class as, among others, “a dependent child of the sponsor”. The
scope of who constitutes a dependent child is found under s. 2 of the Regulations.
For purposes of the present judicial review application, a child, over 22 years
of age, meets the requirements of a “dependent child” when he or she has been a
student:
(A)
continuously enrolled in and attending a post-secondary institution that is
accredited by the relevant government authority; and
(B)
actively pursuing a course of academic, professional or vocational training on
a full-time basis.
[7]
Section 121(a) of the Regulations stipulates
that “the person is a family member of the applicant or of the sponsor both at
the time the application is made and, without taking into account whether the
person has attained 22 years of age, at the time of the determination of the
application”.
[8]
When a foreign national’s family class application
is rejected, the sponsor has a right of appeal to the IAD under s. 63(1) of IRPA.
To allow an appeal, the IAD, pursuant to s. 67(1) of IRPA, must be
satisfied that (a) the decision appealed is wrong in law or fact or mixed law
and fact; (b) a principle of natural justice was not observed; or (c) that
sufficient humanitarian and compassionate considerations exist to warrant a
special relief in the circumstances of the case. Under s. 67(2), should the IAD
allow the appeal, the Board can order one of two things: “set aside the
original decision and substitute a determination that, in its opinion, should
have been made, including the making of a removal order”; or “refer the matter to
the appropriate decision-maker for reconsideration.”
[9]
Under s. 70(1) of IRPA,
“an officer, in examining a permanent resident or a foreign national, is bound
by the decision of the Immigration Appeal Division to allow an appeal in
respect of the foreign national.”
Analysis
Issue 1: Was the second visa officer
bound to accept that the son was in full-time studies?
[10]
Key to this judicial review is the meaning of
the IAD’s direction that “the officer must continue to process the application
in accordance with the reasons of the [IAD]”. Do these words in the first IAD
decision mean that the application was to be processed as of the date of the
first officer’s decision in 2004, as asserted by the Applicant? In other words,
does s. 70(1) of IRPA require the second visa officer to accept that the
Applicant’s son was a full-time student and, thus, a “dependent child”?
Alternatively and as submitted by the Respondent, was the officer mandated to
assess the entirety of the application, including whether the son was a
full-time student, as of 2008 (subject to the caveat that the Applicant’s
receipt of social assistance was not to be taken into account)?
[11]
In my opinion, the better legal view is that the
second visa officer was required to consider whether the Applicant’s son was a
full-time student for the entire period up to the date of her determination in
2008.
[12]
I begin by noting that the IAD, in its first
decision, did not exercise its discretion under s. 67(2) of IRPA to
substitute its own determination. Rather, the IAD returned the matter to the
visa officer with the instructions that “the officer must continue to process
the application in accordance with the reasons of the [IAD]”. Had the IAD
meant, in its 2006 decision, that the only matter for consideration in the
subsequent visa officer review was “special relief”, the IAD would have
substituted a determination that, in its opinion, should have been made – as
allowed for in s. 67(2) of IRPA.
[13]
Secondly, it is important to understand the
IAD’s reasons in its first decision. The IAD based its decision on only one
factor: the Applicant’s dependence on social assistance (s. 133(1) of the Regulations).
Specifically, the IAD found that there were “sufficient humanitarian and
compassionate considerations to warrant special relief in light of all the
circumstances of the case”. The IAD made no determination on whether the
Applicant’s son met the requirements for being a “dependent child” and, thus, a
member of the “family class”.
[14]
Unlike the age of a dependent child, educational
status is not “locked in” as of the date of application (see Hamid v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2006 FCA 217, [2007] 2 F.C.R. 152).
Accordingly, the Applicant’s son was required to meet the requirements of s.
121(a) of the Regulations that he be a member of the family class both
as of the date of application and the time of determination of the
application. Had the IAD, in its first decision, substituted a determination
that the sponsorship application was allowed (as it could do under s. 67(2) of IRPA),
there would have been no need for a second visa officer to consider any aspect
of the application. The date of the IAD’s first decision would have been the
relevant time of determination. However, in this case, the time of
determination is not the date of the IAD’s first decision. Rather, the time of
determination must be the date upon which the officer made the decision to deny
the application – July 29, 2008. Simply put, the first visa officer’s decision
is irrelevant. For purposes of the second visa officer’s decision, the officer
was required to satisfy herself that the Applicant’s son met the definition of
“dependent child” as of the date of her decision and not as of some earlier
date.
[15]
In conclusion on this issue, the first IAD
decision did not mandate that the second visa officer accept the earlier
findings of the first officer. The IAD correctly stated in the second IAD
decision that:
[T]he
eligibility for sponsorship is continuous up to the time of the “final determination
of the application”, when a permanent resident visa is issued. Thus, if the
2004 determination by the visa officer of continuous attendance was erroneous or
the circumstances changed and the applicant ceases to be in full time
attendance, he is no longer eligible for sponsorship. [Emphasis added.]
Issue #2: Was the second officer’s
decision reasonable?
[16]
The Applicant submits that, even if the second
visa officer was required to assess the status of her son’s studies as of the
later date, this determination was not done fairly or was not reasonable, based
on the evidence.
[17]
The Applicant’s first argument appears to be
that the second officer erred by calling the son in for an interview. I can see
no error in the officer’s decision to convoke an interview.
[18]
I first observe that the second officer was
required to conduct a fresh assessment of the status of the son’s studies right
up to the date of rendering her decision. As discussed above, she was not bound
by any conclusions or findings of the first officer on this question. In
fulfilling this obligation, it is evident from a review of the second officer’s
notes that she had problems with the educational status of the son. The note in
2008 from the Bursar at the son’s school noted only that:
He is a student
in this school, started school in 2001, but could [not] complete on schedule as
he did not write his final/external exam as stipulated hence . . . is to
complete 2008 this academic year.
[19]
Far from confirming that the son was a full-time
student, the comment and other documentary evidence raises problems with the
son’s studies. In light of this, it was not unfair or unreasonable to convoke a
hearing to allow the son to confirm his status in the school. As reflected in
the second visa officer’s notes (made at the time of the interview), the
Applicant’s son admitted that “he did not register with the school from
2003/2004, 2005/2006/2007”. On the basis of this admission and other evidence,
it was not unreasonable for the second visa officer to conclude as follows:
I am not
satisfied that app meets the definition of a dependent child. He has not been
in full time studies since before he turned the age of 22. He has not
registered with the school for a number of years, he states he is attending
classes for a couple of hours a day. However, this seems highly unlikely as he
hasn’t paid fees, by his own admission he was spending most of his time in the
house.
[20]
Moreover, before the IAD, the officer’s CAIPS
notes version of the interview was not contradicted by the Applicant’s son (for
example, by way of an affidavit).
[21]
Finally, the fact that the first visa officer
was satisfied, in 2004, that the son was a full-time student is irrelevant to a
determination by the second visa officer of whether he was still a full-time
student in 2008/2009.
[22]
In view of the uncontradicted evidence from the
second visa officer and the documentary evidence, I am satisfied that the IAD
reasonably came to its conclusion that:
Based on the
applicant’s acknowledgement to the visa officer in 2008, he was not
“continuously enrolled in and attending a post-secondary institution…” and thus
does not meet the definition of a dependent child. As the applicant is not a
dependent child as defined in the Regulations, he is not a member of the
family class and may not be sponsored by the appellant.
[23]
As part of this judicial review, the Applicant’s
son submitted an affidavit in which he denies that he admitted that he was not
a full-time student. There are two problems with this affidavit. First, it was
not before the IAD and hence should not form part of this judicial review.
Secondly, even if it had been, it would have been open to the IAD to prefer the
contemporaneous notes of the visa officer, who has no personal interest in the
outcome of the application, to the self-serving denials of the Applicant’s son.
Conclusion
[24]
In spite of very capable submissions by the
Applicant’s counsel, I am not persuaded that there is a reviewable error in the
decision under review. For these reasons, the application for judicial review
will be dismissed. Neither party proposes a question for certification.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
the application for judicial review is
dismissed; and
2.
no question of general importance is certified.
“Judith A. Snider”