Date: 20101110
Docket: IMM-540-10
Citation: 2010 FC 1078
Ottawa, Ontario, November 10, 2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Beaudry
BETWEEN:
ERIK SOLIS JIMINEZ,
PATRICIA RODRIGO NONIGO,
VANIA SOLIS RODRIGO,
ZAIRA SOLIS RODRIGO,
MAYLING MARYORI SOLIS RODRIGO
Applicants
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an application pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27
(the Act), for judicial review of a decision by a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment
Officer (the officer), dated November 24, 2009 where the applicants’ request to
be exempted from the requirement to obtain an immigration visa prior to coming
to Canada on the basis of humanitarian and compassionate grounds pursuant to
section 25 of the Act (H&C application) was refused.
[2]
The
application for judicial review shall be dismissed for the following reasons.
[3]
The
applicants are citizens of Mexico. Erik Solis Jimenez (the principal applicant,
or PA)
and his wife (Patricia Rodriguez Nonigo)
have three children, Vania Solis Rodrigo, Zaira Solis Rodrigo, Mayling Maryori
Solis Rodrigo, who are also applicants in this case.
[4]
The
applicants came to Canada because of problems experienced in Mexico with a drug
dealer and fraudster named Fredi Duque Dominguez (Fredi), who allegedly asked
the PA to repaint stolen cars that had been the subject of insurance claims. The
PA refused, but was warned that his daughters could be harmed, and told by
neighbours that Fredi Duque was not only involved in drug trafficking but also
protected by police officers and public servants. As a result, the PA decided
to leave for Guatemala with his
family in August 2003, following a number of threats made against him and his
children.
[5]
In
January 2004, five months after having left, the PA and his family returned to
Mexico because of health problems and because it had been impossible for the
children to attend school in Guatemala.
[6]
A
few months after returning to Mexico, the PA’s wife learned that Fredi had been
arrested and that his accomplices believed her husband to have been behind the
arrest. Shortly after hearing of this, the PA fled to the city of Puebla with his
family and from there, arranged their departure to Canada.
[7]
The
applicants arrived to Canada on August 5, 2004 and made a refugee claim
later that month. Their refugee claim was rejected on June 16, 2005 and the application
for leave and judicial review was refused on September 20, 2005. In its
decision, the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) determined that the applicants’
account was not entirely credible and that even if there were problems with
corruption in Mexico, it was
possible for the PA to seek state protection. The panel also emphasized the
fact that the applicants had been able to go and live in Puebla for a month
without any problems.
[8]
The
PA and his family then made an H&C application on November 25, 2005 as well
as a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) in July 2009.
[9]
The
applicants submitted that their H&C application should be approved because
a) they faced personalized risk upon return to Mexico, b) they were established
in Canada and c) it was in the interests of their children to stay in Canada,
arguing that it would be difficult for them to reintegrate into the Mexican
school system, as well as d) the fact that the eldest child, Vania had been
diagnosed with an anxiety disorder, and there was concern about her receiving
proper treatment in Mexico.
[10]
On
January 27, 2010, the PA and his family learned they were to be removed from
Canada on February 9, 2010. The PA submitted a request for deferral. It was
granted until the end of the current school year to permit his children to
complete their studies.
[11]
In
its negative decision on the H&C application with regards to the
applicants’ fear of Fredi, the officer decided that the articles submitted as
evidence were insufficient to allow her to find that state protection was inadequate.
She concluded that the PA had not exhausted all courses of action open to him.
[12]
With
regards to the applicants’ establishment in Canada, she noted that while the
applicants have made considerable efforts to find work and to be
self-supporting, they had not demonstrated how the termination of their
employment in Canada and the PA’s spouse’s theological studies would cause them
hardship that could be described as being “unusual and undeserved or
disproportionate”. She also found that the applicants’ social and family ties
with their country of origin were stronger than those they have established in Canada.
[13]
In
terms of the best interest of the children, the officer recognized the efforts
that the PA’s three girls would have to make to reintegrate into the Mexican
school system. However, she found that speaking with an accent, having to have
one’s studies abroad recognized or having to seek entrance or assessment
exams, do not, in this case, amount to hardship that could be described as
unusual, undeserved or disproportionate.
[14]
Furthermore,
with regards to the PA’s daughter Vania, and the arguments made about her psychological
state and anxiety disorder, the officer concluded that it is possible in Mexico to obtain
help from a mental health professional and that there are various support
programs for persons who do not have private insurance. The officer further
noted that “the children’s best interest is one of the many important factors
that must be taken into consideration when assessing humanitarian and
compassionate grounds. However, the concept of the best interest of a child
does not mean that it alone outweighs all other factors.
[15]
Questions
as to natural justice and procedural fairness, as well as whether a PRRA
officer applied the right test of hardship in a risk analysis in an H&C
application under section 25 of IRPA is a question of law, and the appropriate
standard of review is one of correctness (Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008
SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190; Zambrano v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 FC 481, [2008] F.C.J. No. 601 (QL), Barrack v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 FC 962, [2008] F.C.J. No. 1197 (QL)).
[16]
Questions
of fact are on the other hand submitted to the standard of reasonableness (Dunsmuir,
above and Baker v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R.
817).
[17]
In
the case at bar, the applicants argue firstly, that they were denied natural
justice and procedural fairness when the officer decided that there were
adequate mental health resources available to the applicants in Mexico on the
basis of a World Health Organization (WHO) article not presented to the
applicants, or made available to them prior to her decision (Haghighi v.
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), [2000] 4 F.C. 407 (C.A.), Level
(litigation guardian) v. Canada (Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC 227, 71 Imm. L.R. (3d) 52, 324 F.T.R.
71, Zamora
v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration),
2004 FC 1414, [2004] F.C.J. No. 1739 (QL)).
[18]
In Level,
where the extrinsic evidence in question was a medical report, the Court
stated at para. 21 that:
The relevant point as I see
it is whether the applicant had knowledge of the information so that he or she
had the opportunity to correct prejudicial misunderstandings or misstatements.
The source of the information is not of itself a differentiating matter as long
as it is not known to the applicant. The question is whether the applicant had
the opportunity of dealing with the evidence. This is what the long-established
authorities indicate the rules of procedural fairness require. In the well
known words of Lord Loreburn L.C. in Board of Education v. Rice, [1911]
A.C. 179 (H.L.) at page 182:
They can obtain
information in any way they think best, always giving a fair opportunity to
those who are parties in the controversy for correcting or contradicting any
relevant statement prejudicial to their view.
[19]
I
find that there was no lack of procedural fairness here. The information relied
upon is widely available, and even if the applicants had not read that specific
article, it is a piece of information that would have been easy to come across.
I find it hard to believe that the applicants would not have known that they
had the option of using public services in Mexico, and that private services were not the
only ones available to them. Also, the article in question was only one of the
factors considered by the officer concerning Vania.
[20]
Secondly,
the applicants submit that the officer applied the incorrect legal test in the
evaluation of hardship and that the degree of establishment that they have
achieved in Canada and their loss of ties in Mexico will cause unusual and
undeserved or disproportionate hardship if they have to return to Mexico (Pacia
v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 804, [2008] F.C.J. No.
1014 (QL), Pinter v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 296, [2005]
F.C.J. No. 366 (QL)).
[21]
Justice
Lagacé provides a good analysis of the state of the law with regards to this
question in Markis v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 428, [2008] F.C.J.
No 564 (QL), at paras. 23-24:
The
applicants submit that the officer applied the incorrect legal test in the
evaluation of hardship. Instructively, this Court asserts in Sahota v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2007 FC
651, [2007] F.C.J. No. 882 (QL), at para. 1:
Although the distinction in fact may not
always be apparent, there is a clear distinction in law between a pre-removal
risk assessment and an application for permanent residence from within Canada
on humanitarian and compassionate grounds.
Indeed,
while both applications take risk into account, in the context of a PRRA, the
consideration of the ““risk” as per section 97 of IRPA involves assessing
whether the applicant would be personally subjected to a danger of torture or
to a risk to life or to cruel and unusual treatment or punishment” (Sahota,
above, at para. 7) while in the context of an H & C application, “risk
should be addressed as but one of the factors relevant to determining whether
the applicant would face unusual, and undeserved or disproportionate
hardship. Thus the focus is on hardship, which has a risk component, not
on risk as such.” (Emphasis added.) (Sahota, above, at para. 8).
[22]
In
the case at bar, the officer considered that the applicants were able to travel
not only to Guatemala, but also within
different cities of Mexico without any problems,
and noted that they were able to obtain passports without mentioning any
difficulties.
[23]
The
officer
applied the proper test in analyzing and considering the risk component in the
context of the present H&C application.
[24]
Thirdly,
the applicants contend that the officer in making its decision on the best
interest of the children was not alert, alive and sensitive.
[25]
It
is worth reiterating the main principles relating to the consideration of the
best interest of the child in H&C cases. In Legault v. Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration),
2002 FCA 125, 212 D.L.R (4th ) 139 at paras 11 and 12, Justice
Décary stated:
In
Suresh, the Supreme Court clearly indicates that Baker did not
depart from the traditional view that the weighing of relevant factors is the
responsibility of the Minister or his delegate. It is certain, with Baker,
that the interests of the children are one factor that an immigration officer
must examine with a great deal of attention. It is equally certain, with Suresh,
that it is up to the immigration officer to determine the appropriate weight to
be accorded to this factor in the circumstances of the case. It is not the role
of the courts to re-examine the weight given to the different factors by the
officers.
In
short, the immigration officer must be “alert, alive and sensitive” (Baker,
supra, at paragraph 75) to the interests of the children, but once she has
well identified and defined this factor, it is up to her to determine what
weight, in her view, it must be given in the circumstances. . . . It is not
because the interests of the children favour the fact that a parent residing
illegally in Canada should remain in Canada (which, as justly stated by Justice
Nadon, will generally be the case), that the Minister must exercise his
discretion in favour of said parent. Parliament has not decided, as of yet,
that the presence of children in Canada constitutes in itself an impediment to
any “refoulement” of a parent illegally residing in Canada (see Langner v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) (1995), 29 C.R.R. (2d) 184 (F.C.A.),
leave to appeal refused, [1995] 3 S.C.R. vii). [Emphasis added.]
[26]
In
the present case, the officer considered the personal situation of the three
children and gave cogent reasons to conclude that none of the allegations of
hardship could be considered as unusual, undeserved or disproportionate. She
analyzed documents submitted by the applicants (letter from a school located in
Mexico City and a report by a
psychologist). In sum, the applicants are asking this Court to reweigh the
factors already considered by the officer. I find that there are no reviewable
errors that warrant the Court's intervention.
[27]
Fourthly,
the applicants argue that the officer made several factual errors in her review
of evidence placed before her.
[28]
Again,
after a review of the evidence, the Court is unable to conclude that the officer
erred in the exercise of her discretion. The officer’s decision on the whole is
transparent, intelligible and falls as a possible and acceptable outcome.
[29]
No
question of general importance was submitted and none arise.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT
ORDERS that the application for
judicial review be dismissed. No question is certified.